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Box 17, Folder 6, Complete Folder
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Th•"';,~;,~;AL LEAGUE PENNANT CONTENDERS- - - - " " " ' l~ y
BRAGAN:
~~;!'!143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST). .
Meet The Atlanta Braves
18
Proves He's Tough Guy to Beat
By JOHN LOGUE
Nineteen Thirty Five was a heckuva year for the Siluril,
Ala., Buckwheat Mills baseball team.
One-tenth of the men man-
aging in the major leagues
today were in that Siluria
lineup.
The incumbent manager
the Atlanta Braves, Robert Randall "Bobby" Bra-
of
gan, alternated between a
"skint" infield and a Johnson Grass ouUield.
And who was on the
mound Wednesdays and
Sundays? "Lum" Luman
Harris, that's who.
In case you aren' t up on
your baseball genetics, Lum
Harris is the new manager
of the Houston Colts.
There "ain't" but 20 men
managing in the major
leagues - and that's counting a head coach in Chicago - and no less than
two of them got their elementary education with the
Buck~·heat Mills boys o(
Siluria. Those were t h e
days when there wasn't any
income tax. Heck, there
wasn't any income.
Bobby Bragan, 46, has
never failed this auspicious
begiMing.
THE
PHILADELPHIA
Phillies signed him in 1937
and he didn't take but three
years getting into the big
time. He hit .2&'i, .298. and
.3ll at Pensacola, FI a.,
where the class of baseball
wasD."
The next three years he
played his second base in
Philadelphia where he was
known more for his batUe
than his bat, hitting o n ly
.222, .251, and .218 for the
Phillies.
Brooklyn liked him and
got him and he hit .264 ..267
(spent 1945-46 in military
service) and .194 and .167
b e fore returning to the
m1nor leagues at F o r t
Worth, Hollywood and Spokane until 1959.
In the interim, he also
managed Fort Worth to the
Texas League title in 1941
his first time out as a playini!"a;:le~ort Worth finished second and fourth and
second and then Qt' man11,zed J-fol!ywoorf, !"!a. to the
Padf1c Coast pennant in
1953. He fin ished second and
thi rd there the next two
years and in 19.'ili made hi!
major league debut as manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
THE MAN was willing
but the flesh was weak in
Pittsburgh w h ere the Plrates finished seventh twice.
Cleveland called and Bragan brought the Indians into
mid-season sixth in 1958. He
finished out the year at
Spokane where that ieam
finished seventh.
His 1959 Spokane team
was fifth and in 1960 Bragan
turned his talents to coaching for the Dodgers and in
1961 to scouting for the
Houston Colts-with his old
Siluria sidekick Lum Harris.
The Br.aves gave the No.
1 job to Bragan in 1963 and
this year extended his contract as a show of faith
aft.er the Milwaukee club
finished firth, only five
games off the pace. Bra·
gan's team won 20 of its
last26gameslastseason.
Bragan made baseball history at Spokane when he
took an obscure, 26-year-old
minor league shortstop and
turned him into a formidable switch-hitter named
Maury Wills. Lifted into the
big time by a responsive
bat, Wills has gone on to
steal I04basesinone season and be named the Most
Valuable Player in the National League.
BRAVES' ASSIST ANTS
DIXIE IN CHARACTER
Dixie Walker is from Birmingham. Jo Jo White, now a
resident of Sacramento. Calif .. is from down the road at
Red Oak, Ga. Whitlow Wyatt, the pitching coach, Is a former
Cracker manager and lives at Buchanan
Walker the Braves' battmg Instructor ls also a fonner
Atlanta manager He ls well quahf1ed to teach hitting, having
led the National League m 1944 with a 357 mark
Wyatt Is In his seventh year as p1tchmg coach of the
Braves, one of the longest tenures m the maJors
Ken S1lvestr1 former Yankee, White Sox and Phillies
catcher,lsbullpencoach
~~ ~~:
ph~
!!::s' ~IT~~e:e h~:~ae~r:~"f:e l~~:r!ka';i":%
Mo.st have worked as scouts or instructors since their exit from
active playing.-WALBURN.
, t
Braves Rode
A Long Trail
To Atlanta
By JACK DOANE
AllaalaJe on,a lAoolol . . 1 ~"'1.IF.41. .
The Braves, original charter members of the National
Baseball League when It was
formed in 1876, have had
many nicknames and now begin a new chapler in their
third city of residence, but one
fact has remained constant
through it all- winning is the
team's tradition.
The team has had many
nicknames. It has been known
as the Red Stockings, Beaneaters, Doves, Rustlers · and
...,_
The club won four pennants
in the old National AssoriaUon
from 1871-75 before the league
was reorganized into the present National League in 1178
with Booton a membe?-. ContNlders were .frequmt .and
i:>lso
rans f'W th·oui:h the
e11rly years. ~oteam in baseball history ls more reno~ned than the 1914 •·Miracle
Braves" who rcsidf'd in the
'liL cellar on Jul)' 18, then
sla~hed through thr rest of the
league and won the Jl('nnant
by ten and onr-half games,
and rocked the fabled Philadelphia Athletics in four
straight games in the World
Series.
That was the last championship uni~ 1948 when Billy
Southworth, m his third season as manager. brought home
the bacon to Beantown. That
was the year of the victory
cry "Spahn and Sain and two
days of rain."
Just four years later the
bloom was gone. After a peak
attendance of 1,455,439 in 1!148,
the club attracted only 281,278
fans in 1952, and owner Lou
Perini gave up the ship and
moved the team to Milwaukee
in March of 1953.
FOR the next four seasol15
the Braves finished second
three times and third once.
Then came the bonanza as the
same old Spahn and his new
mound cohort, Lew Burdette,
brought the pennant to the
baseball-cra1.ed Milwaukeeans.
In 1959 U1e story was the
same-a pennant. Only the
ending changed as the Yanks
rallied from a 3-1 deficit to
win the world's. championship
in seven games. The following
year the team slipped to second and hasn't won a pennant since.
Braves Boast Three of Game's Greatest Stars
H was almost as if the Milwaukee Braves were destined
for Dixie when they hired their present coaching staff,
which is definitely "you-all" in character.
/
BOBBY BRAGAN
Braves' Manager
ta ta a
By LEE WALBURN'
These are stars .. and
then there are superstars.
The Braves have three of
the latter
Few teams can boast three
active all-time greats like
Warren Spahn, Eddie :\lathews and Hank Aaron.
Immortality has already
been reserved for the name
of_ Spahn._Althoug~ he didn't
wm his first maJor league
game until he wa1 2.'i,
Spahn has won over 350
games in 20 )'cars in the
maiors. He ranks ~cventh
on U1e list of history·s greatest winners.
Spahn has
won more
games, pitched more innings, struck out more baltersand won20 games more
than any other lcflhander
no errs
In history. He had only lo
1;trikeout91hittersin 1964
to break Christy Mathewson's Natonal League mark
of2,505foracarcer.
SPAHN HAS led the National League in complete
games nine times, victories
eight times; innings pitched
and strikeouts four times;
C:3rned run average three
times and games started
and won - lost percentage
twice. lo addition he has
wonfourWorldSeriesgames
and an all-~tar contest. He
ha~ hit more home runs
than any pitcher in National
League hi~tory. A year ago
he was named "Pitcher of
the Decade."
Mathews,
who
Bddle
played his first lull season
of baseball in Ponce de Leon
Park, currently ranks as the
premier home run hitter
among active major league
players. Only six men have
ever hit more homers than
the Braves' Bomber, who
had 422 going in the 1964
season.
Once considered a poor
fielder. Mathews worked at
the third base pooition until
he became adept enough to
lead the league in putouts
twice and assists three
times. In 1963 he led all
third basemen in fielding.
He has a lifetime major
league bqtting average of
.280and six limes has driven
in 100 or more runs.
EDDIE LED the league
twice in homers, 47 and 46,
......
if
andholdstheleaguerecord
for most years hitting 30
ormorehomerunsandmost
consecutive years hitting 30
or more home runs. In 1963
he received 124 walks to
lead in that department for
the third straight year and
the fourth time in his caHank Aaron, younger than
either
Spahn
or
Mathews, still has a great future ahead of him. The past
behind him, however, is almost enough to insure his
place among the all-time
greats. He has been called
by some "the finest a\1aroond player in the game."
In 1963 he had one of the
greatest seasons ever ex-
pcrienced by a National League player. He captured five individual titles,
leading the league in RBI
(130),totalbases(370),runs
scored (121), slugging percentage (586) and tied for
most home runs (44). If that
wasn't enough, he stole 31
bases. second only to Maury
Wills'40.
Aaron has one of the
strongest throwing arms in
baseball. He has led league
right fielders in fielding
three times. At .320, his lifetime average is the highest
of any active majoc league
player. Remarkably durable
he has played in 150 games
for IO consecutive seasons.
He has played in 10 consecutive all-star games.
1
I
���You are cordially invited to attend
The Mayor's Annital Christmas Eggnog Party
Thursday, December 24, 1964
from 11 :30 A.M. until 2:00 P.LYI.
r
I
The Mayor's Office
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
�\
�TO:
FROM:
Ivan Allen, Jr.
0
For your information
0
Please refer to the attached correspondence and make the
necessary reply.
D
FORM 25-4
Advise me the status of the attached.
�THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA
P. 0. Box 4148
Atlanta, Georg ia 30302
Personal
Honorable Ivan Allen,
Mayor, City of Atlanta,
City Hall
�'
�PARKs-CHAMBERS
41-43 PEACHT R EE S T REET
EXECUTIVE OFFICES
ATLANTA 3 , GEORG IA
��m . -•
em o, · · FROM THE DESK OF
CARY
B.
WILMER, JR.
Ca~
lme~ f <
235 The Prado. N, E.
Atlanta 9, Georgia
Ctuu
-7
Ai,
~
�THE MORNING AmR
TRIBUNE SPORTS EDITOR
Change of View
ATLANTA, Ga.-A couple of years ago, a visitor to
ifh;1~~f!\it:J:/:P:~:n143.215.248.551~~t
i~ f~:~i~fiinf:C,143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)
of the upper stories, would have had the soft November
sun bouncing into his eyes off tin siding and roofs.
Today, from that same spot, a
the flickering ricochet, but not so
this time it's in color, blue to be
th, ~tcr chairs being set into place
putpose stadium.
visitor again is bothered by
much as before. Reason Is,
precise, from sparkling new
Jn Atlanta's 18 million dual
The new stadium, which will become the home or the
Milwaukee Braves In a year, if not aooner, and one day, a
pro football team, Is on construction 1ehedule. U completed
by April, It will set a universal record for speed in siadlum.
erection and, to be more practical, be worth $700,000 extra
to the owners of the seven huire cranes busylnr around the
area nsterday,
Jan Van Duser, former Tampa sports writer now a key member of Jesse Outlnr's Constitution staff, was the volunteer guide
for a tour of the staggering complex, being built where there
used to be slum and/or near slum housing. The story of this
gtadium, yet without an ending, is one of bold courage, convlction and a handful of men of action.
Future Home of Braves
In the event you are but an occasional reader of such, the
Milwaukee Braves were to shift here beginning this April but
have now been told by the National League to remain in Mlnne1;ota one more summer. It isn't likely to be a financially profitable season there with fans angry at the projected move.
With tacit agreement to move to Atlanta for the 1965
11eason, the contract for the structure was let, Meanwhile,
the St. Louis Cardinals or the National Football Lea111•
came with an ace of shlrtlnr but the city and the Carda
patched up their domestic squabbling with promises of a
new stadium and Stormy Bidwell decided to stay Indefinitely
in the blues city.
Atlanta, meanwhile, holds a glimmer o( hope that the Braves
may yet come for the '65 season, meanwhile ready to invite any
National Football League member who may become disenchanted
at his present surroundings. The American Football League is
ready to exp1md now and probably would take in Atlanta and
New Orleans next fall, ll the two southern cities gave It the sign.
Atlanta, however, probably will hold out for the NFL, a while
anyway.
....
The stadium is but a quarter-mile from the beari of
Atlanta. A major lnt.erchanS"e of all hla'hwan is riS"ht ne:d
Seating for Huge Crowds
It ls convertible. Will seat 51,500 for baseball, 57,100 for
football, all most comfortably. It is a bowl three-tiered and an
excavation. That is, park, walk In from street level and you're
on the second tier. You walk down to 16,455 lower grandstand
and box scats. The upper grandstand seats 25,200. Offices are
built into the structure. Milwaukee has them rent free in the
25-year-contract that is in the vault. Milwaukee also has the
concessions, with a percentage to the stadium authority.
ln a sentence, the stadium is beinl' buiU because the
city's mayor, Ivan Allen Jr,, felt one was needed, saw the
benefits of it, coupled with the pro football and/or major
leag,,te baseball. He went out and got it.
This way:
Allen, a former chamber of commerce president was elected
as the "businessman mayor." His first team for the maneuvering
that brings the stadium and ball club, included Mills Lane ,
c:hairman o( the board of the Citizens and Southern Bank,
Georgia's largest; Arthur Montgomery, Atlanta Coca~Cola bottler;
Opie Shelton, chamber of commerce execuUve director; Furman
Bisher, Journal sports editor, and Atlanta architects Bill Finch
and George Heery.
"All we had to do, those two years ago," said the mayor,
"was rind a club which mic-ht be wantlnr to move, then persuade them to make that move to Atlanta, where we ofrered
them a stadium not yet designed, to be built with money
we didn't yet have, on land we didn't yet own."
Mayor Author of Project
Allen was the author of a "Forward Atlanta" promotion
project and the stadium was one part of this. Biggest assist,
really, came when at least two big league clubs did show genuine
interest.
On assurance of payment, banker Lane got two architectural firms to pool skills to design the stadium. Forty-five members of their staffs worked on draft.! for which there was yet
Deither a contract nor bulldlng money.
Options on urban renewal land, 5Z acres, were snapped
up before it could be broken Jnt.o smalJ pieces. Line was
tn provide almost $700,000 in unsecured loans io finance
the first steps for the stadium which no one had Jet asree,.
to build.
Coca-Cola man Montgomery took the job as chairman or
th• Atlanta and Fulton County Recreation Authority, the official
(ConUnaed on Pase I, Cot. U
Morning After
(CoLUnued from Pare 1)
unit. The group set about talking to the Kansas City Athletics,
Braves, anybody who·d listen.
A two-year juggling act began, trying to get a team with
which to get a stadium to entice a team. Sports fans-and this
was important-and those favoring a cultural center and audl·
torlum pooled support for the passage of the bond issue that
would make it possible. Previously, both proposals had been de·
fcated in bond issues. The joint team or sports and high brows
got the referendum through.
Next, the contract, for construction, and for the blr
lea,-ueUam.
With the disappointment caused when the Natlonal League
chose to force the Braves to remain in Milwaukee another year,
there has been some grumbling, but not much. The minor league
Crackers will play in the swank surroundings this year, on
grass that is already grown in hot houses, as the arand structure
has a shakedown year.
The supreme test foJlows.
A couple of years from now, will those magnificent lnteratate highways which brush against the stadium see AUantans
driving the 70-mlle.an-hour limit to get to the ball game. or,
to get on through the city to whatever it will be that will be
more magnetic, then?
At least, Atlanta bids for an answer,
�8700 west Wisconsin Ave.
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin
November 14,1964
Dear Mayor,
(
I live in Milwaukee.Maybe you do not care about the
Milwaukee Braves but I do. Last year I went to fifteen games.
The Braves won thirteen games and lost two games.I'm not going
to give up the Braves.If the Braves stay, amd I know they will
they .v,111 win the pennet, and shov1 Milwaukee is their home.
Iviy family gets season passes, we are going to use them
all.There are going to be quite a number of fans in Milwauk ee.
1'4 1~
\L
.,
.
Sincerely you,,s ,
���Mayor Ivan Allen:
For your ·information.
from
OVID R. DAVIS
�CONCERNING . .. THE MILWAUKEE
l
BRAVES
11-16-64
Ivan Allen Jr.
I think you know most of the facts,
but I am sure your prejudiced reasoning forces you to
view these facts thru smog covered glasses.
Mr. Allen, consider yourself a
Milwaukee resident.
How would you feel after 12 years
of supporting the MILWAUKEE Braves and suddenly have
them stolen from you.
best t eam
La.st year Milwaukee was the
( out of 20)
11th
attendance wise in the majors .
Can you call this poor support???
NO
Is it
the
fault of Mil waukee and Wisconsin fans
that owners have
spent money so
l ess profit on
fool-hearty and mad e
the whole.
Your eagerness for maj or l eague
baseball cannot be condemned.
obt in
same are
Your
under handed
methods
to
and deplorable.
Baseball has become a touring
with Atlanta as one of i ts stops.
have
as many suckers.
We
Lets hope you
loved our
have caused an unjustified divorce,
source of evil.
Good
Brave s but
with
money
carnival ,
dont
you
as the
Luck in 661.
" ~ l y~
Ron Alberts·
1004 Hanson St.
La Cros se, Wisc.
���=NOV
9 1964
JOHN FRANZEN, JR.
3621 W . CLARKE STREET
MILWAUKEE, W ISCONSIN 53210
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�November 10, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, jr.
Atlanta, Georgia
Sir -
You must be joking (although it certainly is in
bad taste) when you say "Milwaukee shoua:d step
aside in a gesture of good will so Atlanta can ·
have the Braves". How about you practicing a
little of what you are preaching - and let
Atlanta step aside?
I certainly hope the "powers to be" will make
it a little tougher for any situation like this
in the future.
Oh, well - perhaps some day we here in Wisconsin
will have the last laugh????
Miss Ethel A . Stahl
2569 S . Graham St.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53207
P.S.
No doubt your mail
you probably won't
but at least I put
remark "gesture of
is screened and therefore
even see this letter,
my feelings about your
good will" down on paper.
�L/ . - _- .//i - ~
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/t1af!,011. J \lt1n Allen., :J11. o
C¼-
A:tl.ard:.a
cuff flail
A:ll.n.rd:a, yeolU',).a
.
..
'
().I
.7
0 /.
---
��Atlanta tries to hit one into the stands
It takes an awful lot of dream or
an awful lot of commercial expectation to make a hardheaded, business-minded city
like Atlanta plunk down $18million for a major league sports
stadium-especially when it
ends up by tagging on an additional $700,000 to insure completion within a year.
Yet that is exactly what Atlanta has don e, and all without
any rock-hard assmance that it
is going to get th e big teams to
fill its seats for baseball (5 1,500)
and football (57,100) . Of course,
Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.,
(picture) and his associates
think they have the transfer of
the Milwaukee (nee Boston)
Braves nailed down for next
spring. But the Milwaukee city
fath ers are putting up a brisk
fight in the courts, and nothing
is yet sealed and delivered.
The bait. The answer, of
course, is that the advent of a
major league team brings with it
a shower of gold-much from
out of town-even if it peters
out after a few years. One survey figures that just in 1961,
after the New York Giants
moved to San Francisco, $11million was spent in the city on
baseb all entertainment.
Atlanta's stadium boos ters
figure their chances this way.
They'll be the first major league
baseball city in tl1e South. The
city's own population -is 1.2-million ; to that add 25-million
people in seven Southeastern
states, tied by a netv. ork of 32
expressway lanes less th an a
mile from downtown Atlanta.
Six metropolitan centers are
within 2½ hours driving time of
the stadium, and there's not a
traffic light to balk them.
On the air. For the first year,
baseball attendance should hit
1.5-million, according to CocaCola bottler Arthur L. Montgomery, one of the project's
sparkplugs. For his part, Mayor
Allen thinks $SO-million a year
would be " a very low estimate"
for the dollar turnover and boost
in sales and services. There are
also rosy expectations for TV
and radio revenu es.
Atlanta is betting that its fine
spring and fall weather should
put it way ahead of chilly 1ilwaukee, where postponements
are a hazard. And even Milwaukee, with a top team and the
first glow of novelty, shattered
all kinds of attendance records.
It took quite a few years, and
considerable downgrading of the
team, before its attendance began to shrink.
�THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
© 1964, bu Th• J ournal Campanu
Eighty-second Year - 288 Pages
Sunday, October 18, 1964
Circulation Last Sunday. 587,505
Sunday, 25 centl
I.:atest Eilition
tt
usin Feels
Discord 'F;::!~:~~:~: County Threatens Atlanta
USSR Will Last N143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)1 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):.
w· th suI.t to Keep Braves
!°rtbe~.
I
Facin g Opposition, t~t~ 143.215.248.55n~:~:~~;~sc:: ~~;~; :ir~·~:;1~~r~~t1:r
Not Expected to Be
1 - - - - - - - - - , - -Long in Control
l t'~i~:~n' ~:;~rn: :~~ ::!e~~a:!~:~:~=!~:~ AMC, union
New Chiefs Believed Soviet
hierarchy, the!r. back•
Stevenson, Edward R. Murrow,
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)uSria~d ';;;;e~:;~
1
Nikolai V Podgorny, the 61 settmg
0
1
has I_urked Just behind Brezh1 th
0
is.. ~a143.215.248.55 e:u::r
some high off1c1als here as a
m~ to wrch. .
notic~ 0 ~/ s:~s::~~ ::;,e~~=
new _leadenhip were the express1ons of deference to the
eN_•:o~r!:"r::!!~trvtce ;:;at
Walhlngton, D. c. _ The adn,inlltratlon 11 convinced that
there 11 discord In Moscow and
throughout th• Communist
world and that the drama of
"examples
ot excel
le~~·.1
day, will be presented at a din-
6y ~~?Je~6!i!hattD143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):~:=~
will receive as previously announced, th'e society's highest
tribute-the Family of Man
•;~:·society was founded by
the Protestant council of the
~~t:~:
co143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) was
Near
Accord
on New p act
Negotiators in Detroit
no way of know- ~i:::ss~~%o~ ::efo~i:\:d
,,
~
t io~:;;e0:;u!~
143.215.248.55he143.215.248.55::~~ss;~e:ee~ s~~: ~~!!:~inited States information
coa.litlon of contending forces. mg on behalf of these strong Luthul! was designated for
Rr um~ 111·,mg
And they are thought to be en- centers of pow~r or limply sp, leading the tight against the
or The Journal staff
1~fs~f~s7t!oa~ a 'a~rtheid' (white su~remacy) Detroit, Mich. - Negotiator,
countering many expressions
th
of opJ)Osition and doubt from The new Soviet leaden ~re 143.215.248.55n~t}he Sou African gov- for the American Motort Corp.
Communist parties around the sll:'~king respectful]¥ of the l WNDT is an educational tele- and the United Auto Work"n
world.
m1htary budget, which Khru- vision station owned by Educa- bore down on a nonstop barThese views were given to
Turn to PGll*' 2, col. 2
tional Broadcasting Corp.
ga.ining session early Sunday
President Johnson by his prinaimed at reaching a strike set·
d pal national security advistlement before going to bed.
er1 in a White House meeting /·
It was _apparent that both
at noon Saturday.
sides felt 1t was urgent to reAnalysts here said they still
solve the remaining issues in
time to get some work.en back
had no reliable explanation for
BJ' A.VEll:r WITTENBERGEII
G0 Idwater Fears a us .
~h~~d!~~ ~v:~~win1i~~i~~
fs~
~l~~f ;i143.215.248.55':i':.'!n h143.215.248.55
Ske pticism Noted
.
1;:n:~:;1*'~T~:e; ; e-;;0 :;:~:r
f~e t~1a~i ~:;d~I
t~;~~:~
1Saturday, &J)Okesmen reported
i~:ie~~a143.215.248.55 ~~
1
. ~ut there was general s~~p, ~oa~!~a;,cr:~~i:~us:::n~hl~ ..:a~y~~im~:,. c~U:C:,~ the :!!tp:1g~:s
bcism here about th e official "one man, one thumb" federal "We don't want on~ man's the strike w~ich, s~rted at
143.215.248.55;;;~:llo:~:m
Ma~::;::~~ fa~ermo~e: ::i::ti:~g~:r s::~
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)b ~~e o~h;o~:t'fs,;' . ~i~ :i~~'.
The ,complaints ing rights.
g
S::i~~::
=~g~o:i::: ::·
nl•t ))art~ newspaper: ~ere
d:~a~:~:~; pl~c:t:~r::~m;143.215.248.55rat, had rJ~~n~1c~'.~i:143.215.248.55p~n.~:~dg:n~~
rea.~ H broad generahzat1ons Communist China would not be- suggested that Goldwater'• fin- ous venion than that offered
ger should not be on the nuclear the automotive planu in Mildesigned to please the largest ·
possible number of party mem- come a nuclear threat to the
T
waukee and Kenosha.
14
1 2
hen and iubject to a variety of world !or at least 25 years.
urn 10 ,,..,.
' co'
The company contends that
ln~r:~:;!~~:· or a clear In· w!!e143.215.248.55ldt~~: at~::e~;;:.·
r~:~ 3C Killed
as Plane
h . 111· .
!:k~on~:!143.215.248.55t!~ n~:~~i1:
t!143.215.248.55e;: o~~ s~nru;r143.215.248.55;us143.215.248.55 ~eking _can dev~lop a Jaunc~::rs~ther appliance manuracThe quick collapse or the ear- mg vehicle for its new atomic
A union spokesman said some
lier claim that he had resigned warhead. .
Antioch, Ill. _ UPI _ Three progress had been made on this
for reasons of age and health I The Arizonan, hoarse and persons were kill.ed Saturday issue Saturday, but reJ)Orted
was another.
suffering from a week long 1in the crash of a <1mall private 1that. the parties still werfc far
ras es In
Offic~~o.::W:e!ou~.:=!;!
.
~~= .:n~=:~~
InOIS
three miles east of An· a~~':'men;_ ~'!_!_ ~r~ ~~
Aleksei N. ~osygm coulif long1argued over and over that free .
.
rvt>pu _ies Tum 10 AMC, IHIU 18 • col. 2
retain effective control as lead. unioni:oim would be de~troyed taid witnes<1es_ reported seeing
en ol the partr and govern- by centralii:ed government, the plane "spm out and dive Studen ts P rotest A-Blast
rn e n t, respectively. .Though which he contended President intotheground"
T ky J n-JP-Abo t 170
~ri~r!:t:;aro~~ot~~d143.215.248.55= Jo143.215.248.55t::
which the M~t!u~:d te;e.:::143.215.248.55 ~:
= = = = ====lvote of orgamzed labor Is pow- or Oak Park. Ill, Walter H onstrated Saturday outside a
143.215.248.55i~~
!~~f=143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)::e~l143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)\r:~~
On Wisconsin :i~~t:tdu~1~:;!~r::~ed his ~":~~In: a~~· th~r Pl~i ~~ fi~::u143.215.248.55y~hl~~:y h;~:;st:~
1
"o~:un~~n~
a;:: ~~:a~ ~g~1~
Proposed Nominees 143.215.248.55t;~~d :~torc~u~~m:~;!~I
for a 1964 State
nb,t,at,o,
Blight Award
He repeatedly accused John I
Not long ago there was
formed in California a group
which calls itselt the "Los
A~;Ies Grue~ome commit·
tee. rdlts/ un~tio: ~ : make
~~r~ng~on
~::~:'tfir,
49, of
t~~
such rule and could eventually
ma~e labor _the pawn or big
bu;~ness or big g~v~n~;en~. 'f
elec~d s;:;a!~:1~ ~efend ~a:r!,
right to strike, bargain collec:~pl:sh:~n:u I~ ~gl~f~:; ti~:Jd:i:c::b~'fJe ~:'1~iectlon
ron
O
tit~ i:
ofhe temperature climbed to
~~':\T~
tb~ci:r~~lar approach might :~~wh~~hbe~;:~ 0 ~:aih 1~: ~i~ld~
G~eM:~~
be taken in Wisconsin, which man'a thumb thould be on your high for Oct. 17 set In 1956.
has a few eyesores of Its own country and another philosophy It was the warmest reading
worth hailing. Why not call
It the "Wiscon1in Uglies com-
ci~~=~
ho~~,,~i:_:· C. Bartholomay.
board chamnan or the Braves,
y ~~rsr:~~
the nati?n Su~da; n_ight on '.
Conferred at Leng!~
.~~: :~p143.215.248.55so~p;::a~::~ ~~:~ that he had mentioned a
Commumst Chma, first nu-, n.1t~~n:'"t~:rT~ hc~:n:;~ht143.215.248.55;Monday in San Antonio, Hou• Grobschmldt Orders Le:tter
clear test and the power shake- conferred privately and atl ton, Fort Worth and Dallas.
Th& county's letter Pointed
up in the Soviet Union.
length with Secretary of Stale ~ohnson had pl~~ to tour out that a transfer of the club'.!I
.J.ohnson will go before tcle- Rusk and Secretary of Derense1~~y 81:a,\~s
woul/Ybe br! franchise f~om Milwaukee
i;
~~f:~~:~~i:r~~; :::;~. Tuesday and Wed·1~:!~1~;~~r!'i_~Jc~~;
tc
~c
~:~: :~!.~~;.tc~:;~;a~~f=~
Humphrey
South
in
~;~~eR~':~ assistant
A,hev!U,, N, C-UPI-s,, ,_ corpora~on counsel, drafted
and mailed the letter at the recanna~~nt~c~~ttteel~ir: si~"natorBarryGoldwater,thetor Hube": Humphrey talked quest of County Boa.rd Chair~:; ':~ch ae broad':s~ 0 1Republi~an presidential nomi- J)Ower- pohticat and electrical man Euge~e H. Grobsch midt
~~da ?o:~s:~:~~i:~:t~~= ~=(r:~lon~~t1e!:~r:}n°v,ed
tour of the JOU th Sat- :::.
the s ~ live.
" r ~ ~ t ~ hef~re ~e !.h1!i'1u1ed
(Dean Burch, the Republi- sl.art of the secunty council teS-
i: :e
to answer It.
U:~ ~~/
~te~
th,"'"" lhem,e!,o,.J
ln Its announcement _Saturday, the White House said the
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):J~u~!Y143.215.248.55nc~~::i.143.215.248.55
~~:o~~::·
House. er
source said Goldwater still was
~ri~~i~~ T:~~·~;:ee i~:; ~an~~a~;te!~u:e t! h~;~
Tu,n lo,...,. 2, col, 2
fi::rs1::a~~ec1:~e t~th;:s;!t
Bad gers Beat Iowa 31 . 21
'
'
for First Big Ten Victory
~
~:~~:
th;o~~:;l :~~wngradcd the
military significance of the Chinese nuclear test. He also was
assured Friday by Ambassador
Ana~oly Do~rynin th ~t Soviet
foreign pohcy remained unchanged.
Toe president, who had been
expected to fly to hi, Texas
16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST);/~o:a~tJk!143.215.248.55
~o"e~ ~~t 143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)Lr:- le~!!: c~nt:peeche,.;t Kn?~~le and fo143.215.248.55:Ct~fcft also asked Ri ~e
~:dy
so~!w::t c:~;, tla~;1::.~::h::~fta:
.
a\.S . n . po
ecbut n~ rain was fo recast for the scheduling of a Monday
The Milwaukee Journal en·
the Milwaukee area.
briefing for con~resslonal lead- dones Lyndon B. Johnson for
en of both parties, seemed to president, Page 2, Editorial
suggest some recent change in Section.
The lost art of political
heckling is recalled by Walter Monfried. Page 2, Editonal Section. • • •
British Labor party leader
Harold Wilson is credited personally with winning I a It
week's close election, in an
article by Edwin Roth, Jour-
i;:kl~~n~aiw~i~a~ 143.215.248.55: 143.215.248.55::ia~a:rre;;143.215.248.55iri~~
1wing through the Lone Star Section.
The resort, tavern, restau·
:: o~~dth~~ee~!'ce::1~;;;:;
~tfivert;:~
to broadcast Atlanta
I
~;:~-:i;~ ::~:U~n
~;::ie
'!~~
rights
~i~se::\~~::r~:17143.215.248.55.~=:
,
ton this week. He has not an•
nounced the date, but last week
Journal Wire Sen·lcu
State and other sections of the ,free to accept a standing orfer 1reportedly told the sports weekWashington, D, C-President west, rear~nged his schedl:lle from Joryn~n for secret intelli· ~y. Sporting News, to expect an
1~e;,~ia:~,143.215.248.55rse\~~7::e~:e~~ng th y White ge;~:s~n~f~ncg~ et a r George
Haen143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)m143.215.248.55rd~;
here since Sepl. IO when it make the "report and assessCO SN'S f
b 11
reftchJi~n~tlast Joni;, howev- :143.215.248.55" ..
t~ou~~ ~re=~~ W~!am Nsc!red its°t~~t ~ig
er. By 5 p.m., the mercury cause for national alarm and Ten victory Saturday, defeathad fallen 15 degree, after no immediate emergency."
Ing Iowa, J l -21, before a rec0rd c~td .ff ~- 1~ 3
a S:~:;an~hi:'"w':~ther bu·
AbNpt ShHt of Plan,
M;di-
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)U~i~tg!OO;~i:~
pollute the handsome scenery
ol our state? Candidates for
:iu1:! 4 bligh,t award might
Billboard Interests, which
mar the public view, particu,
larly those that created th&
iuper billboards occasionally
seen from intentate routes.
extol with roadside jungles
of garish sign!.
The junkyard operators
who create whole mountain!
of rusting metal and shat·
tered glass in the midst of
scenes of tranquil beauty.
The litterbugs who strew
our roadsides with debris, our
beaches w ith the razor sharp
flaps of flip top cans and our
waterways with junk.
The subdivision developers
who bulldoze d ow n every
tree In sight and march cracker box houses over hill and
dale, and the ow n e r s ol
shacks and trailers which line
the shores ot once l ovely
lakes, a tribute to bad local
zoning or no zoning at all.
The defacers of parks, the
carvers of initials on benche!,
t he target ! hooters at highway signs and the daubers of
paint on scenic attractions.
With such a roster ot eligible candidates, the awa r d
ceremony m ii;ht take longer
than an academy aw a rd I
presentatJori.
J0 hnson TV Talk tO Assess
Russ1·an Shift Pek1·ng Bomb
I :th~r ~~:~L~!mt!e~:;143.215.248.55
Saturday posed a problem
for the storm window crowd.
st!~~i:d:~ei~.
a better day to leave them
lantawouldthrowlnalucrative
- - - - - - - - ----- - - - - - - - - - - - - l ~ r ! : i ; 7 ~ ~ ~
~:f}n~x:os1on of an th~i~ c~;i~er~J~t~ :ti~ sh;r0:s~;it
Record Tying Heat wave
=~:r~' g~~;~~g :i~\~·u~::~dl~
Gives way t C00 l F t
T,m" '"'" "· <0/. ,
The w eather
"Machine gun alley" is the
coast guard term for the
ocean off the Cuban shore.
~:d a~~a~:/~}!u~n~t~~;;
CompL!•dbyUSW••U.erllurm
co143.215.248.55w,S~~d:;:~;·'t:~:~d~i=~~
Mo.ily cloudy and cooler Monday.
Hirh Sunday mid1iitie1, low Sun,
!ci';i~~t_f:':.:P1t~~:·~i~rthwut
about thi• !re!. •
Hour
j s j s j 1 j a j 9 j1oj 11 j12
She'd rather smoke n good Tem~. 1&~168 67 166 165163 16 1160
cigar than be a dedicated acWllconain - Partly ,unny and
treu, says . ~rah Miles,
0°~d; :~d•:~ol:r~~nd~~ud:ig~~
rear old Bntish nonconfo
and Monday, Occuional rain af•
1st; Page 6, TV Screen Mag- lectinr about half of the northen,
r!,~ ~
azme.
• ·• •
•• ·
Th~eP~c~~:t ~~i::i:.h~~l~
Wells ~ e se; ri b es t~e . art
~r~re~~f~~:~erca~pt~g~~ng~
portfolio of his famou.!I Arizer
na desertscapes: Albert England of Waukesha shows his
political button collection,
and photographert take you
d!~nt~re
i~:143.215.248.55::~!aih.,H!~I~
~~:1i::.u1hc111t; low Sund.y night
Temperature range Saturday, 8 1
~e!ipji143.215.248.55n~n:0 :.~ at 1:15 a.m.;
Temperature range a year ar11
Saturday, 72 and 56; precipitation,
II trace.
Sunri,e Monday, 6:09 1.m.; 1un•
1et, 5:03 p.m.
nd
1::~: m!':,:~~i:":os'143.215.248.55- ~:·d!~ m
Weathcrm11ponp11ge4,p11rt2.
~i
~~n:t!! C:~\d~~ 0
tury.
New Look at China
Peking's Progress Visible, Solid
This is the first of a JO part series
on Communist Chillll, The writer ill a
speciali.,t in far eastern affair, for the
Paris newspaper Le Monde. He recently completed a lengthy tour of Red
China, hi, first visit there 1inc11 1955.
BJ' ROBERT GUILLUN
Senator Barry Goldwater wu greeted by
&irls with bunches of balloons when he
spoke at a campaign rally at the AkronCanton (Ohio) airport Saturday.
-.
'
,
1
1
~!~. T~=te~oth!oo1r!~t~~ \
'We Challenge Johnson to Debate Us!'
a.m. Friday, M1Iwaukce 1- -
Goldwater 1:'tfore a _crowd of re~;:~a~nag;i:O%\~ ~~=m.~~
~ega~;::hi:h~::~:he~s
As he b~ought . the .seventh143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) 3 ·:~i:~r16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST),1~~sitln?!~h143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)i;;;le~~n;;:!'n~;,:;~:tt[~;
in Pravda the orticial Commu- week of his pres1dent1al cam- sure destroyer of freedom any- workers at the Kelvlnator ap,
tra~1ctory.
I
,
Bill Veecb: hits "greed and
stupidity" of Brave, owners.
Story on page I, part 2.
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) f:!~r a143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)eb~t~h:h:143.215.248.55 M1~fea:\~ houn of bargairfog
emment"
• •
OtThaJourn11lSt11tt
County otticlals took their
first legal step Saturday to try
to keep the Brave.,.
A formal notice wu sent to
official• of Atlanta that Milwaukee county would sue them unless they Immediately atopped
trying to entice the Bravea
Atlanta. has offered the
Braves a 25 year leaui for th&
18 mllllon dollar •Ports stadium
143.215.248.55::r !~:n!~1
under 1Man,s Thumb
Drop Offer'
ItGWarns,
c or
O to ourt
lnilucements to Movt!
anil Br ealc lease .
H e r e 'J!..re Illegal,
Letter J\:s serts
St~ve to A g r e e in
Tim e for Full Day
of Work Monday
;;
::~we~:s:~~e~:~u:. a 1 1 ~u~:Zs'°~?143.215.248.55<!n:nf;d~~; ciZte~e:~: ~~rklJnite4 Sta tee
The new leaders of the Ser
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---==----~
Loe Anrele1 Tlmei/Wuhln&lon POst
Nf:WI Servke
Peking, ChJna - Well, let's say It
right away, at the end of a long journey of seven weeks in Communist
China: When Peking's rulers say that
they have "on the whole" succeeded, I
think they are telling the truth.
The Communist regime is now firmly on the tracks, although errors and
obstacles brought it close to disaster.
There has been great general progress,
although there ttlll exist areas-30metime1 immense-of difficulties and
1uffering, as the Chinese concede implicitly and u any objective visitor
can see.
Enemies of communism would be
thunderstruck by the progress; friends
of communism would be appalled by
the problems that remain.
Communism hu won two vlctoriet
in China.
Firtt, it has conquered all sorts of
long standing evilt--Corruption, diaorderliness, disease. The advances I
noted in my last visit in the autumn of
1955 have been consolidated. And if
it is true tbat the Chinese have suf.
fered a famine, they are not hungry
toda y.
But communism has also scored a
second victory. It has decidedly "succeeded"-if that is the word- in manufacturing obedience by pushing its 700
million people through the rollen of
Mao Marxism.
It was in the three day, 2,000 mile
train trip from Hong Kong to Peking
that I witnessed my fint surprise.
There, carved on the technlcolor landscape, was the Immense effort of •
whole people to feed its multitude..
Not a square yard had been left uncul-
tivated, right up to the rails, on the
very embankments, in the ditches,
along the shoulders of the roads, on
und banks temJ)Orarily left dry by
the rivers.
After the years ol the great crisis,
from 1959 to 1961, the plannen in
Peking had transferred priority from
heavy industry to agriculture, and tbe
view from my train window answered
my question: What would Chinese agri,
culture-which is both the bane and
the foundation of China's economybe like in the summer of 1964?
There was a second surprise. The
peasant-in the singular-no longer
exists. No more lone workers, but
teams, 20 at a time, one behind the
other on the paths and in the furrows,
making the same movements with the
same tools at the same time in clusters over the countryside, like platoon,
of soldiers on maneuver.
At first tight. anyone could see tha t
he was in the land of the communes,
Tumtopo.feS,col, J
�CALL
LETTERS
FJT
11/11/64
CHARGE
TO
Book Telegram
Deliver - do not phone
Mayor's a££ice
L64
11 1
23
I I PM 4
I would like for you/ to be my guest, at lunch Thursday
November 12, at 12 :00 noon, Venetian Rbom; 1 ,ct·j:Aita...,,.1___
City Club, in honor of Mr. Thomas J. Reynolds, Jr .
and other Braves officials. Please repl0 - Mr
Drummond, JA 2-4463.
_....----0
4
1
Iv an Allen Jr.
Mayor of A l ·a n,i;a.-_.
t
/'
' hereof, which are hereby agreed lo
INLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
1269- (R 4-55)
�CALL
LETTERS
hereof, which are hereby agreed lo
INLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
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Atlant 4 ) .Georgia
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=( 00 )•
=FOLLOWING WIRE SENT TO MILWAIKE BRAVES.~
f"WE ALONG WITH a°THER ATLA NTANS WISH -THE BRAVES AND YOU ALL
. USCCESS IN MOVING TO ATLANTA WE WILL SUf PORT YOU ALL THE
WAY•=
I
JAMES S GAUSE PRESI DENT EL ABERCROMBI EXEC SEC AND
TREA UR ER LAUNDRY WORKERS INTL UNION 218:
THE COMPANY WILL APPRECIATE SUGGESTIONS FROM ITS PATRONS CONCERNING ITS SERVICE -
I
�--lVA,N--.
lo lJf= "l \~vS&
\"-!\~
FRoM
Too
w~
-
�W,..ALLACE
WM.
CHAIRMAN OF" THE B OARD
DAVISON-PAXON
ATLANTA'
GA.
Co .
DREYFOOS
�D avison•s
t.
t
OF OIXll
��Georgia BHsiness
Insurance Insiders
Silent on New Issue
By JIM MONTGO:\-IERY
Hottest topic in Atlanta financial circles now Is an Insurance
company to be with a big stock issue to come .
. ~ But nobody connected with
tlie venture will discuss it.
. The principals and under-
news
on it
a s planted 11m M•,.--.,.
,by them for the sake of peddling stock.
•.; A.nd this is a particularly
":.sensitive time because the
company's stock registration
"Statement is in Washington
awaiting SEC action assigning
·an effective date.
But the SEC also has the
power to delay the issue if it
_;6uspects prem;iture promo)ional efforts.
• 'w
~us~
talking;
. Meanwhile, a call to the
fybl:~e
Business
FEATURES
Thursday, Oct. 15, 1964 ·
Page 46
Fourth Major Producer
Orders Increase for Re-Bars
l'IEWS-VIEWS
UAW Considers Whether to Strike
100,000 SHARES
, .story
e~~=r:1s!~e
·fa~?/ unr:!!:~ ::;Y
THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTIO'."4
and certain of Its partners
and their families, and to
Bache & Co.
"'-Titers greet
---press inquir:,ies with stony
silence, obviously scared
· stiff that the
'Securities &
.J Exchange
·~o mmlssion
· will assume
-any
Youngstown Joins
In Steel Price Rise
~~
~n;143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e~he~s~~
i~f
'{i!:~!~C: o!:te:~~ ; ~
..Wued in Washington, that is,
jlot Atlanta.
-~ The SEC announcement
• lhows that United Trust Llfe
Jnsurance Co. of Atlanta ac·
,.tually filed two registration
Statements on Sept. 22.
United Trust, they reveal,
Approximately 100,000
shares to United Trust officials and members of their
families.
The balance, some 25,000
shares, to prospective investors "who may be valuable in
marketing the company's insurance policies and develoJ>ing business."
The SEC announcement also
noted that United Trust al·
ready has outstanding 75,000
common shares sold at $10 a
share to 15 wlidentlfied preorganizational subscribers, and
that management officials as
a group own 35,000 of these
shares.
It further points out that
United Trust was organized
in Georgia last May, has ol.fices In the Hurt Building,
and intends to conduct a life,
accident and health insurance
business.
NET PROCEEDS
The net proceeds of the
stock sa1e, It adds, are to be
used to meet capital requirements for applying for a Ji.
cense to engage In the insurance business in Georgia and
to conduct an insurance business.
The only company official
identified by the SEC release
is Paul Light, president.
While no background is given on him, his former emJoyer sent out a press reease a few weeks ago announcing the appointment of
his successor and mentioning
that Light had become presldeot of United Trust In Atlanta. That employer was Pan
American 14fe in New Orleans and, as best we can rec:all now, L.ight was vice presi-dent in charge of agencies.
Anyway, United Trust and
its proposed big stock issue
are what have been keeping
Atlanta financial and insurance executives buzzing with
speculation in recent weeks.
,~~eri!iu~~ }:: uand:~h~: r.
~ discounts) through the sale of
·pne million shares of common
stock at $IO a share.
Right olf hand, wl'.! can think
,of no insurance company that
tias ever sought so great an
,lnitia1 capitalization.
One or the registration state'ments covers 750,000 shares,
of which 700,000 are to be
offered for public sale (on
"whatever effective date the
SEC sets) through an under·
--pTlting group headed by Bache
~ Co. of New York and Courts
& Co. of Atlanta.
__.JlO A SHARE
, The SEC said the offering
-.price, which it estimated at
-$10 a share maximum for
~rposes of computing the
~r,143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)at:~~m!~·re a~ ~n:i;
plied by amendment. The re"lnaining 50,000 shares of this
issue are to be offered to per·
·sons designated by the com-
pany.
•• The other registration statei'!'lent covers an additional
115,000 common shares to be
...Dffered through company ofjicia1s at $10 a share as fol-
~Jows :
'"' A tota1 of 50,000 shares in
e(p.lal parts to Atlantic Realty
6Co,, in which a majority in·
).eiest is held by Courts & Co.
We're holding it on October 22nd ond October 27th
(1ome progrom eoch night )
right here in our office
starting ot 8:00 p.m. 1horp
Write Box NC-498 c/o Journal-Constitution.
Lut-minute information from our Research headquartera in ·sew York abould highlight a tborough•going
analysis of the indugtries as a wbole----help you make up
your mind about the individual i&&1es that make them up.
INSURED SAVINGS
NOW
Ji Jii
For a current run-down - plua a good chance to
uk any questions you want to - plan now on join·
ih,
frn
\t_ij \Hi
in~£ u;~u'd like to come, either alone or with someone
else, simply call and' say ~o - or eimply mail ill the
coupon below, There I no charge of coune.
.ij 1~:;f
·------------------------------
i~n ~:n
HIGHEST RETURNS
QUARTERLY DIVIDENDS
1,_-~-·,,;.,!_ii_~
\ ·~,~
!J:ff
tn
I would like to attend your Forum
Thuuday evening
OR
October 22 0
lrn\tn
?i~;:
li~ljj
llffll:ll
,t~JS
CURREMT RATE
DIVIDENDS PAYABLE MARCH, JUNE, SEPT., DEC.
Name
5
Address
~/~~
"The most important investment
you make
is in the sound judgment ofmen.' 1
Robi nson, Humr,h rey & Co. s ince 1894 ho s b« n h el ping
Georg ,o n~ to oeh,eve the ,r pe rsono l f,nonciol goo ls
Co ll
upan our 70 yeors of ex perience o nd knowledge
Let one
of ovr RegiUered Represen tot,ves ou1st you in atto ,n ing
yovr parlieul ar ,n ve~ tm ent ObJecl ives.
Phone
MERRILL LYNCH,
PIERCE,
~ff :!H "'"" ... -143.215.248.55'~' ~-~...'::.•~ ~ !.;.~}
PEACHTREE FEDERAL SAVINGS
MA.IN OFFICI
' SANDY SPRINGS BRANCH
9030 PEA.CHTRU RP., N.W. 6343 ROSWILL RD., N.E.
A.TU.NT.A., GA.
Tuesday evening
October 27 0
~·=·
Robinson, Humphrey & Co.
ir143.215.248.55
ELECTRIC BUILDING, ATLANTA 3
ty J:i
270 Peochtree Street, N.E.
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e; Since UJ9 4
J!ll Jf:!
Telephone : 522-1313
~:erTco;~ ;,t::: ~
~~=~::
1lHI
ii ,Ui
T! _________________ .,__,,_,_,_"_,,_,.._._,_..._.._._"--'·____,._.,_.._"_1__, _.,_•__.
/nsfl/ment
r
Office open Sat1<r""7 ll'l(lrltln1, for your conttniencc.
RhodH-Hoverty Bvilding
Atlonto, Georgie 30301
�1
.
-
Tw
Lo cal News -and Features
Veeck Wants
Club to Stay
Veeck. I saw him for about 30
seconds at the world series in
If the Braves leave Milwau- New York; he didn't say that to
kee, it will be "the worst thing my face ."
Favors Expansion
that has happened in the history of base--~Veeck said he was no t per- ·
b a 11" and will
be due only to
sonally interested in the pro"greed and stuposed new ownership of the
pidity" of the
Braves, "but I would do anypresent owners,
thing, and I mean literally anyBill Veeck said
thing, to help Milwaukee keep
Saturday. The
former O w n er
its ball club. And fo r only one
reason: Because the fans deof the Milwauserve it.
kee B re w e r s,
"!he only conditions . under
who went on to
record breaking '
Vh ich Atlant a deserv~s a maVeec k
Jor league ball club 1s expans ucc ess with
the Cleveland Indians and Chi- sion, which I happen to be in
cago Wh ite Sox, ti:ied to move favor of." .
the St. Louis Browns here in Veeck said the present own1953 .
ers couldn't very well ta ( k
"The only reason I am will- ~bout the attendar:ce potential
.
.
_
.
m Milwaukee "until t hey work
mg to be quoted to t h is effect at t he promotion there."
is t hat I have told the present "Th
f M 'J
k
1
1 wau ee
Milwa ukee owners the same
e . peop .e O
thing t o their face," Veeck said a nd W_isconsm ha v_e proved
i:;aturday in a telephone inter- th ey wil\, support m~Jor,.ieague
wiew fr om his ho me in Easton baseball, Veeck said. If the
Md
' Braves aren't drawing, it is
I Asked for comment at his because t he operators ~ave forhom e in Lake Forest, Ill., Wil- ro.tten iliat baseball IS en~erliam C. Bartho lomay, chairman . amm~nt, aJ1 d that packaging
pf the Braves' board of direc- is as important as t he product.
to rs, said:
Others Have Managed
"I don't thin~ I could . COf!1· "The thing I can't understand
~ent on that. Bill Veeck is Bill about the present owners is
whether they don't know how
By CLEON WALFOOB,T
or The J ournal St art
ry Dr1·ve
Nard LI•tter
to sell baseball in Milwaukee
or whether they don't want to
sell it.
"I realize that revenue from
a million attendance is 1ess in
I
Milwaukee than in any other
ecessary to study whether new major league city, because the
aws w ere needed .
revenue per fan is the lowest
He also suggested more trash anywhere, but there still is no
ontainers and antilitter post- reason why ~hey can't operate
rs. The health education divi- profitably with an attendance
ion would handle the school of a million- unless they e rograms and prepare press pcct something like a 25% reeleases.
t u r n on t h e i r investment.
Rheinfrank told the commit-\Every other club in t he major
ee that the campaign would league has . managed u n d e r
ot show results immediately! th ose conditions.
nd that the additional sweepDoubts Club Will Leave
rs. were needed for immediate "Moreover, all thev have to
e)1ef. Against that need , he do i~ promote hascball, includ•
aid . was the unknown degree mg the v·ist pot ntial of the ri·
f. effed1yeness of the cam- valD' with the ne r-h , Chicago
pa1gn.
. Cubs, as has ne, er hcc- 11 done
Barry said at the meeting in Milwaukee, a nd t hev'U
with Rheinfrank that an effi-\over a million."
l
I
cient campaign would require Veeck, who has been o,'Cic'xr...,..;:..._,,.;
.
. . - t ·
1·11.t: , ·o b
ii ealth in 196 1, had
Ll.lJrary Will Display c.one pe nrting
-hot:
Exhibit on '64 Politics I don'.t think the Braves will
1
. . leave Milwaukee. NQt because
. . ..
A two pa rt e h1b1t. P?ht1cs of the th eats of lawsuits so
1964" will go on display in the \much as because it just doesn't
central puhlic library Tuesda '. make sense to lea e a ft e r
National newspap r and mag- drawing more than 900,000 pera zine endorsements and a com- sons. They can't JHtk up nnd
parison of planks will be ex- leav E!\'C ' time they . cc a
hibited in the ,ciencc area of lchn ·c to picK up a few q uick
the library. Bio~rophical in for- hu ·s.
ports m c n·. How
1mat ion on andidatcs will h g ccd~ cen you get, e, pec1ail •
c.·hibilcri m the t;irc uh1tion m n ,'1-10 t
uppo~r.d to hav
ar, 11
mo r· ., ..
�'1 • • • • • -
, Psrt Two
Lo cal News and Features
Veeck Wants
Club to ·Stay
Veeck. I saw him fo r about 30
seconds at the world series in
If the Braves leave Milwau- New Yo~~; he didn't say that to
ee, it will be "the worst thing my face .
hat has happened in the hisFavors Expansion
ory of base- . .~'-""'•
Veeck said he was not per~ a 11" and will
sonally interested in the prope due only to
posed new ownership of the
"
l'greed and stu' idi ty" of the
Braves, but I wo~ld do any~resent owners,
thing, and I mean llterally anyBill Veeck said
thing, to help Milwaukee keep
~aturday. The
its ball club. And for only one
armer owner
reason: Because the fans deof the Milwauserve it .
. ee B re we rs,
"The only conditions under
..._
which Atlant a deserves a mawho went on_to
ecord break1_ng
V eeck
jor league baJJ club is expan; u cc es s with
. sion which I happen to be in
e Cleveland India_ns and Chi- favo'r of."
ago White ~ox, tried to mo~e Veeck said the present owne St. Louis Browns here m ers couldn't very well t a I k
. about the attendance potential
953.
"The only reason I am will- in Milwaukee "until they work
ng to be quoted t o this effect at the promotion there."
s t hat I have told t he present "The people of Milwaukee
ilwaukee owners the sa11;e and Wisconsin h av e proved
hing to their face, " Veec~ said they will support major league
aturday in a teleph_one mter- baseball," Veeck said. "If the
iew from his home m Ea ston, Braves aren't drawing, it is
d.
. because the operators have forAsked for co mment at h_is gotten that baseball is enterome in Lake Forest, Ill. ~ Wil- t ainment, and that packaging
iam C. Bartholomay, chair~an is as important as the product.
~f the Braves' board of directors, said:
Others Have Managed
"I don't think I cou ld com- "The thing I can't understand
ent on that. Bill Veeck is Bill ahc1u. th ru: enL_o._= ii
By CLEON WALFOORT
or The Journal stat!
�BL.ACKIE SHERROD
They're Right
Off the Bat
A'l'LANTA-The visitor realizes he's in the South's
most progressive spot when old friends m~et him
at the airport with jack daniels and grits and hustle
him through a maze of freeways to where major
league baseballers will soon live.
This is the sleek new stadium being built almost
in the heart of Atlanta. Bulldozers are shoving deep into the 11Jsty
Georgia clay and concrete tiers are thrusting up amid the everchanging skyline of the oldtime city.
" We're going to play an exhibition \vith the Yankees in this
stadium on April 9," says Bob Richardson, a top governor's aide
and one of the forces behind the new sports ambition. " And we'll
open the season in it on April 15."
By "we", the Atlanta citizenry means the Atlanta Braves,
who will make the jump from Milwaukee in a matter of days.
There is much official hush-hush about it, lest an earthquake
or the Supreme Court or some other act of nature spoil the pudding at the last second. And it's typical of baseball's pussyfooting
a ttitude that the Milwaukee-to-Atlanta move hasn't been openly
declared before now.
The Milwaukee directors are meeting today in Chicago. And
they'll vote to approve the shift. The Nationaj League officials
meet in New York later this week and will doubtless okay the
franchise transfer.
The stadium is a rush act. When the Atlanta leaders suddenly decided they wanted in the Big Swim, they didn't waste time
with flim and fadclle and political strings and twiddle dees and
twiddle dums. A couple rich johns said they'd underwrite the
thing, so start digging and all the details would be worked out
later, like dividing the stadium cost between the city, county and
state and retirin it with revenue bonds. So the dirt comTllenced
flying. The contractors ,vill have to forfeit $2,000 every day past
April 15 it takes to complete it.
T
On the Way
HIS CITY desires very m uch to be the sports center below
the Mason-Dixon and it dang shore will be.
It's jus( a question of time until a pro football team locates
there.
Atlanta had the St. Louls football Cal'dinals, for a couple days
anyway. The Bidwell brothers wanted to move their NFL franchise to that city. And the bustling Atlantans offered them a rockbottom rental deal. But when the Bidwells returned to St. Louis to
talk things over, they were offered a better deal by a citizen of
that city, one who owned a small chunk of the stock. So they bad
to pull out of their Atla nta commitments. F or the time being,
anyways.
There have been reports that the Steelers might consider
moving here. Owner Art Rooney bas been seen lunching here with
Ar thur Montgomery, a wealthy soft drink distributor and one of
the go-gettum powers around town. But the feeling now is that
Rooney will nc;it leave Pittsburgh.
The Ameii can Football League, it's believed, would move a
club there at the drop of an invitation. Commissioner Joe Foss,
on a recent visit, warned the Atlantans " not to let too many
trains pass by". Meaning an AFL franchise in the hand is worth
two NF L d ubs in the bush.
�11ym . me contractors will have to forfeit $2,000 every day past
April 15 it takes to complete it.
T
On the Way
HIS CITY desires very much to be the sports center below
the Mason-Dix.on and it dang .shore will be.
It's just- a question of time until a 'pro football team locates
there.
Atlanta bad the St. Louis football Cardinals, for couple days
anyway. The Bidwell brothers wanted to move their NFL fran- ·
chise to that city. And the bustling Atlantans offered them a rockbottom rental deal. But when the Bidwells returned to St. Louis to
talk things over, they wei-e offered a better deal by a citizen of
that city, one who owned a small chunk of the stock. So they had
to pull out of their Atlanta commitments. For the time being,
anyways.
There have been reports that the Steelers might consider
moving here. Owner Art Rooney has been seen lunching here with
Arthur Montgomery, a wealthy soft drink distributor and one of
the go-gettum powers around town. But the feeling now is . that
Rooney will ngt leave Pittsburgh.
The American Football League, it's believed, would move a
club there at the drop of an invitation. Commissioner Joe Foss,
on a recent visit, warned the Atlantans " not to let too many
trains pass by" . Meaning an AFL franchise in the hand is worth
two NFL clubs in the bush.
lie baseball people are
~oun-o-Imffi ffiis sp enclid radiotelevision market. At Milwaukee, tlie Braves are sandwiched between. Chicago and Minneapolis. At Atlanta, the nearest major
league franchise will be Cincinnati.
a
A
· Familiar Faces
ND THE BRAVES should fit right in like homefolks. A couple
of the Negro players, Hank Aaron and Lee Maye, say they
are muchly agin moving to Atlanta because of the segregation
business. But they'll play where they're told, or else get another
~b.
'
Ed Mathews, the Braves third baseman, was a minor league
star here in 1950. Coaches Whitlow Wyatt and Dixie Walker both
managed minor league teams here. Coach J o J o White is a qeorgia native and Manager Bobby Bragan is from nearby Birmingham.
Lloyd's of London once made a study and predicted that
Atlanta would be the largest city in. the world a t the tum of the
next centw-y. At least that's what some local citizens claim.
And it's believeable because the impressive notion _a bout this
city is its drive its scorn of redtape and meaningless hours
around conference tables. There is more a ction than talk. Atlanta
wanted to be bigtime in sports, so some of the riches underwrote
the project and they went out and got results. 1t was as simple
s that.
�_ __,l,,_8_ _ _ _ _ _ __;s::"::.:"d::•:,c:Y•_;O::':::'o:::b•::_'_:l::B,_,~:::•64::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_T_,_H,cE"----"-M'-l- L'-'~'-'-A.:..U"-"K'-'E'-'E"----'-'JO=U_,:R::.:N:...:.:.A..::L:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;s::"::.:"da
= y,_;O::':.:
'o"b,'-r--'182,--'1-"96'-'<--------'P-"a.:..
••~ l -
County Warns Atlanta to Drop Bid for Braves
From ~ · I. c<'l lr.amn 8
s~rf~
You Can Count on Us ...
Quality Cos;ts No More at Scar·s
might be a good time to have,p,,int o_ ut that respect for c_ o,. move_ in the_ county board w;_that they may seek to have.
the Un It e d States sup reme tracU: has been a can:linal rule 1tum over to the Braves all COlbbasebatl made subject to anti-
n~;a:~f n~~n143.215.248.55t fo:l~h 143.215.248.55:,;e-~:::lnl~ \:~,i,!io;i~! ~~t143.215.248.55 :•:~:~lhh~; !h7~'i1. 143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)O r:c;;~~:n0~;70hin:':'!'trust laws if the Braves are
of franchise if the Braves re- said.
waukee contract "will lead to to the club. The county now permitted to move.
Cl ~;! tavu need the approval
. Baltimore Decision
ol~i:~tio~e,!~issfi;; =i~t~ ::i:;~entage of the conce!- b!f'.:ce~r~=:143.215.248.55;e ;s1::r~;· f~
!~:
M'Th~11~tter to Atlanta was ad· Am.erican
leagues. held that fr~~ ~%b~h~~t7oo~:e 1
dressed t o Mayor Ivan Allen, maJ~r league baseball was n~t bait owners.
c~:~:
~ n FF~~ep;e~u:~~
Arthur Montgomery ot the 1:u1ton county recreation authonty,
whl~ ru n, the new Atlanta
Stadium.
It said, In part:
" We have been reliab ly Informed that the city of Atlanta, F uJ ton county a nd the Atlanta a nd Fulton cou nty recreatlon authority, for a considerable period of time, have been
actively 10liciting the principal
officera and majo ri ty atockholder1 ot the Milwaukee Braves,
Inc. . . . t o breach an existing
contract with t he county . . .
and to effectuate a t ransfer of
their p rofessional baseball franchise in Milwaukee to the city
of Atlanta for the 1965 playing season.
Grounds for Sult
"We wish to a dvlH you that
1n our legal judgment, such con·
duct and action on you r part,
lather Individually or in concert, cons t i tutes autf!cient
rround1 for a legal cause of action ag a i n st you and your
bodies politic under the laws of
bnth t he atates of Georgia a nd
Witconsin.
"U n I es s you Immediately
ce11.e and desist fro m thla Illegal activity and courH of conduet, we will be obliged on behalf of the county of Milwaukee
to initiate a auitfor lnjunctional
relief against each ot the afore-
~a':;
~!n~
:s,:~it~~ t;:i?:~
in your official capacities."
Ri ce q uoted a clau se in the
Stad iu m rental contract stating
143.215.248.55ie:,~ ~:~en~ep~ra:is~~I~~ ~~=~:s.or radio and television
congressmen.
Atlanta reportedly has of-
~~!w!~ the federa l anti·
No Replles Received
th~a:143.215.248.55 ot~he;eemo~·: ::::v!~
The county w ill suggest to On Sept. 30, Grobschm1dt sent here
P
other clu b owners that they not letters to the club owners,
·
become a party to the Braves' league officials and baseball
Congress men Act
breaking a contract with Mil·;commissioner informing them of Representative Henry Reu~s
waukeecounty.
the county's efforts to keep the,of Milwau kee and Senator W1IRice said the letter would Braves here, which included a.Ham Proxmire have indicated
1
~i:
5
40.95
Idif!!!! HEAT ELECTRIC DRYER
,
• NOT A WATH PAINT
• EXCEP'TIONAL COYH A GE
• FUME RESISTANT
• EASIH HUSHIN G
• IITTll ADHfSION
A ctress Gi na Lollob r igida and Indonesian
P resident Sukarno joined in a song with
Italian singer Domenico Modugno at a
143.215.248.55;~~. !~:~~ api~!lei::,uin :~na~~ee~~=
Wondr-1.ux
Monday, the Vatican announced Saturday.
LATEX WALL PAINT
AMC
From,,,._.
J , colt1mn"
con1truction) for the 1965 play- announced Sa tu rd a y, was
held ne.xt Saturday and Sunday
in,i seuon" but ad~ed that "!he reached about an hour be~or_e ·A. mt.bronze_sculpture o.f anl A series of guided tours, recep.
: : :ye~~proach
not bemg 143.215.248.55:St~~=
]r"
n~~:t ~hoe~}\;;~uk:S
tiOnS, special masses, a concert
_e.rth~lomay Got Orter
Ri~e said ~ fort., by Atlanta
0ff1c1als to 1~uce the Braves
~.o breach their .con~.ract were
most reprehens ible.
He exp,:esae_d reluc~_nce to
~~i~ia~s~ 1 1~:ut~ 1;,;7t~~r~':
ROEHl'CK .-\:-ID CO
~el~i~.~OeO Bc~::ac~
ae;i~
and television rights or a S7,500,000 five year contract. The
Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. has of-,
fered the Brave_s a S525,000 a
yea r broadcasting contract if
the team stays here.
~
1
Democrat Casts /MU Parents W eekend
Bronze Elephant W ill Begin Satur~ay
~~es; ~~a~~!~ai~o!:•:id~ ment, the details of which were Given Goldwater slt:11~:::~:~ ~:143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e ~~:V~
I
J;:
SEARS
~
'"th,
"""'
will
pt,, ,11
home game.
at the
Stadium.
"e1:n143.215.248.55: ~:!:~tl:,n:::~.rit1~
SAVE
x:~"::~
of six other .clubs ~o move.
This de c Is Ion, In a case in which they (the club owners)_ Grobschmidt has received no,e!'l communications comm1sGrobschm1dt said the letter brought by the old Baltimore wm,~ld ~ft want to become em· replies from any of the baseball sion to determine whether a
t o othl!l' owners would be sent club against the National a nd b roiled.
!officials He did receive several.move by the Braves would be a
143.215.248.55n:,:~
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s::s:!~~ti~~:. cash bo ·
About 8,600 workeni In Mil·
waukee, 12,500 in Kenosha and
3.000 in Grand Rapids are in·
volved in the work atoppage.
Police in both cities said
pic~eti"r!-~as ~rderly ~turda~.
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Wisconsin Repu~hcan_ party ~o
commemorate h is visit to Mil·
waukee Tuesday..
. .
The sculpture 1s six mches
high and seven inches long. It
b:!~:~ 1i[18143.215.248.55d
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a~
the
concert by pianist Eugene Js.
tomin at IU5 p.m. Saturday at
Brooks Memorial Union. The
banquet will close the weekend
activities a 1 p.m. Sunday in
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PORCH and FLOOR
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5 heall plw " Air" to fluff sweaters, pillows
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Intet-ior light; Sun Fresh ener for toweb, ,heel.I
Porcelain finish top; white acrylic enameled cabinet
s.,a n DOH Not Eatab•
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Sur• ori•inal
to
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pdcu.
prica 1r•lo• prie.,.
Free
Episcopal Seminary
to Hold Open House
Ele~tri~
Blanket*
Was hington, D. C. - JP - A
British embassy spokesman said
J::~a~t:~;~~';::~~;~~e :~ro:r:a!oU:~!;:~eca: h:i~
I
campus and solemn evensong post as a m b a s sad or to the
wi ll highlight t he annual open_United States for seve r a l
house at 1'.'ashotah House Epis· months and had agreed to do so.
copal seminary Sunday.
The request was said to have
The Rev. lmri W._ Bl~ckbur_n. been made by Britain's new for.
professo r of ecclu 1asl!cal h1s- eign secretary, Patrick Gordon
to ry, wi ll officiate a t the even· Walker. Indications were that
,ong cerem o n y. The Rev. Lord Harlech would be on hand
Thoma. J : Talt_ey, as_sistant pro· 1when Britain's new prime m_in_isfessor of h turgics, will preach. ter, Harold Wilson, meets with
The seminary is located off President Johnson. No defmite
Waukesha county t runk CC be- date or place for the meeting
tween Delafield and Nashotah. has been set.
In Capitol Colll'f
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OFF I CE J A C K SO N 5 - 4 7 B9
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DE NTAL SURGE O N
957 HUNT ER S T R EET, N . W .
AT L ANTA 1 4, G E O R GI A
1 0... 17 ... 64
Dear Sir:
Enclo s ed is a copy o f the wire sent to
Mre William Ce Ba rtholomay of the Milwaukee
Br aves or ganization 9
If I c a n be o f a ny f urther as s ist a nce a
ple a se c a ll on meo
Wi th bes t wi she s fo r your con t i nued
s ucce ssa I r emain ,
�Y OCT
i6
41 PD• EltT
Will IA~ C BARTHOLOMA
J
2 NORTH R vF. SIDE Pl~ A
I\TLANTA HAS A
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GRAND GLORI 01
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HARE IN
qm~ THE ERAVt . H
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5 4T 9
WELCCI~ V~ l 1TH
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57
�WESTERN UNION
SENDING BLANK
CALL
LETTERS
Fa
t
CHARG E
TO
T
• GAULTll1'
Copy t:oJ Mr . Opie L. Sheltoa
/
Mayor Ivan Allen, .Jr . v
Send the above message, subject to the terms on bock hereof, which ore hereby agreed to
PLEASE TYPE OR WRITE PLAINLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
1269- (R 4·55)
�City of Atlanta
Parks & Recreation Dept.
MEMO
TO
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FRO~~
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F O RM 34 • R • 39
Tim e _ _ _ __ _ __
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....,._, _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _
You were call ed by
Please call or reply
Returning your call
Will call again
L e ft this message
SJ
Da te - - - -- - - - -
O
D
O
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You we re vis ited by
Waiting to see you
Wishes an appointment
Please Route
Please take action
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WE OFFER FREE TWX RESERVATIONS TO A RAPIDLY GROWING NU BER OF
DOWNTOWNERS IN THE HEART OF METROPOLITAN AREAS AC O THE Tl
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raves Sta Macha·ery·
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What,
Fellas?
Mayor
Ivan Allen Jr.
of Atlanta
CHICAGO, Oct. 21 - (AP)
MIiwaukee Braves
board of directors, by a 12 to
6 · vote of members present,
asked the National League
Wednesday for permission to
shift the club's franchise to
Atlanta, Ga., for 1965.
is all smiles
as be
-The
telephones
friends t-o give
them the news
of the
Milwaukee
Btaves' decision
to move their
National League
The action at a meeting from
which newsmen were barred w ill
be considered at a special league
m eeting in New York Thursday.
The Bra ves need six ot her club
owner votes to switch from Milwau kee where former owner Lou
Perini brought the team from Boston in 1953.
Against a co m i c opera background1 the Braves' decision to
move to Atlanta was announced in
baseball
to
.; thefranchise
southern city
next season.
~
...;
N
t
0
.
,.;:.
The move bas
long been
rumored and
became official
\ Vednesd ay.
~::,
i=
a terse prepared statement issued bearing on th e Braves' action
after a two hour directors' meet- Wednesday was conjectural.
ing at a swank n e a r northside
However, P. K. \Vrigley, ownclub.
er of the Chicago Cubs, was
The statement was distributed
quoted as saying he would not
to newsmen by Ernie Johnson,
oppose the Braves' move because
club publicity director, at the
he believes in "free enterprise."
newly-established Braves' office
Wrigley noted he did not opsome four miles from the site
pose Perini's shift of the Braves
of the directors' meeting. No top
from Boston to l\.fihvaukee a-n d
club official was present.
The long-expected m o v e came suggested he would not oppose
another
move now.
one day a ft e r league President
President Roy Hofheinz of the
Warren Giles called the special
league meeting in New York to Houston Colts said he would at"further discuss the Milwaukee- tend Thursday's New York meetAtlanta situation and take action ing with an open mind. "I'm not
thereon.
certain yet how I'll vote."
Giles reportedly talked to club
The minority opposition in the
owners by t e 1 e p h on e Tuesday Braves'
shift vote was disclosed
morning. Whether h is conversa- by Edmund
B. Fitzgerald of Miltions with the o w n e rs had any waukee.
In a prepared statement a few
hours after the meeting, Fitzgerald said he and fi ve others were
unaltera bly opposed to the move
which he said would be detrimental to the Braves, baseball i.n
general and would " violate the
public trust which has been placed
in this or ganization."
The other five negative ,•oles
included directors Duane Bowman, l\'ladison, Wis.; .Daniel
Parker, Janesville, l\Tfs.; John
Puelioher, Joseph SilllJJson Jr.,
and Carlton \-Vilson, l\Uhva.ukce.
Fitzgerald's 6-page statement
particularly
criticized
Braves'
board chairman William C. Bartholomay of Chicago and club
president J ohn McHale for previous statements indicating the
Braves would remain in M.ilwaukee.
Conspicious by their absence
at the statement issuance \\'ere
Bartholomay and Braves' executive vice president Thomas A .
m:,1c.f~
........
_,
":)..
~
.
..... 'l,,
the milk demands of his children at the breakfast table. From left
are Eileen, 7; Kevin, 5; Cathleen, 12; and Colleen, 13.
- UPI Telephoto.
Milwaukee Mov,es to Prevent Shift
MILWAUKEE Oct. 21 - 1corporation counsel winging to
(UPI) - The ' Milwaukee Circuit .Fudge Ronol<! Drechsler
County Board of Supervisors with. a 40-plc:s page document
\
back1n:g up then plea. The super.
W d
e .n~day obtam.ed ~ r~- visors had appro ved a resolution,
strammg order m c1rcmt 19-0 urging court action to keep
court which would make the the Braves here.
Braves in contempt of court Drechsler set next Tuesday for
if they ask the other National " show cause hearing on why th e
League owners· Thursday for county should not be granted a
temporary mJunchon to keep t he
. .
perm1ss10n to move to Atlanta, Braves from moving until a full
Ga.
court hearing is held on the mat-
The supervisors, reacting w ith ter.
urgency after the Braves anOn other fron ts:
nounced their intentions to seek
Gov. John Reynolds from the
a new home, sen t the county executive mansion at Madison
put all legal resources of the
state at the disposal of the
county in its court fight. He said
"it's a sad day for baseball."
Mayor Henry Maier said the
PHOENIX, Ariz., Oct. 21 (UPI)-Virgil Carter of Brigham Braves' aclion would remove the
Young University Wednesday was illusion that baseball was a sport
than a business.
named the Western Athletic Con- rrather
11
I think the circumstances of
ference's Back of the Week while
this
transfer
d efinitely gives baseend Darryl Alleman of Wyoming
won his second straight citation ball a black eye," the mayor said .
"
I
am
completely
disheai-tened
as Lineman of the Week.
Alleman was chosen again this
week "because his play against
Texas Western Saturday was
Ed Williams used a 6-iron to
rated as the greatest end per- register a hole-in-one on the 120formance at Wyom ing since 1951 yard first hole at Windsor Garand eclipsed _that of comijetitors dens Wednesday. Witnessing the
for the weekly honors.
shot was Hank Rickelton .
Wyoming's Alleman
Is Honored Again
Gets Hole-in-One
that the Braves' management
would break not only its contract
committment to the country, but
also its moral committment to our
community," the mayor said.
Other government, civic and
business leaders denounced the
move.
The circuit court action taken
by the supervisors is based on
the county's contract with the
Braves which calls for the team
to play all of its home games in
Milwaukee County S t a d i um
through the end of the present
contract-or through next season.
The county corporation counsel
said that if the Braves go through
with their plans to get league
approval Thursday in New York
for a move, they will be in con-
White Sox to Travel
In Own DC-7B Plane
CHICAGO, Oct. 21-(AP)-The
Chicago \Vb ite Sox will travel in
their own plane, a DC-7B, next
baseball season.
The company, headed by Arth ur
Allyn 1 owner of the White Sox,
bought the 56-passenger craft tor
an estimated $1.25 million. The
White Sox will use the plane on
all trips with possible exception
of West Coast jaunts, when commercial jets may Be used.
Chica,go
]awyer,
1
He'll Need All That Energy
Red Schoendienst, the new manager of the St. Louis Ca-r dinals,
gets in a little off-season "managing" as he tries to keep up with
-Jr.,
who reportedly own 40 percent ot
the club's stock.
Absent at the directors meeting
were Perini, said to still hold 10
percent of the club as chair man
ot the Braves' executive committee, and another director Coach
Vince Lombardi of the Green Bay
Packer s.
Meanwhile Milwaukee govemment officials, civic leaders and
fans j o i n e d in criticizing the
Braves' action.
"This is a sad day for baseball,
said Wisconsin Gov. John W. Reynolds. "The owners of the Braves
are showing a callous lack of faith
in the people of Milwaukee and
Wisconsin.
I pledge all due resources of
the state to the Milwaukee county officials in their legal efforts
to prevent the move, and I am
requesting the attorney general's
office to make its staff and facilities available to 1\-lilwaukee
county in these legal efforts."
Mayor Henry Maier said the
Braves' ac tion would remove any
illusion that baseball is a sport
rather than a business.
" I think that the circumstances
of this transfer definitely give big
league baseball a black eye,"
Maier said. " I think that as this
story is told baseball generally
will not feel that the joy w ill have
been worth the pain of it."
Rep _ Clement Zablocki (D-Wis)
said he believed the Braves' move
would be the "straw that broke
t he camel's back" regarding government action to regulate the
sport under federal anti-trust
1aws."
tempt of court. The office said
the possibility also ex isted that
other National League owners
could also be held in contempt of
court if they take a vote on the
Braves' proposal.
Notre Dame Drills Stress
Passing for Stanford Tilt
~OUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 21 (AP) Second - ranked Notre
Dame's football squad concentrated on passing in a 20-minute
sc rimmage Wednesday for the intersectional clash w ith Stanford
here Saturday.
\
Quarterbacks John Huarte and
Sandy Bonechio alternated in
passing, mainly to split End Ja ck
Snow and right end Phil Sheridan.
Ranum W·ins Skyl"ine
Cross Country Title
Ranum won the Skyline P rep
League Cross Countey championhip Wednesday with 15 points at
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)a~f T~t~~lftJi::Je·inG~~
best time al 7:46 over the mile
and a half course.
Adams City finished second with
38 and was followed by Westminsler 59, Thornton 66, Mapleton 70
and Fairview 79. Brighton did no t
participate.
Wes_t_e_r_n_S-ta- te_ R_a-nks
15th in Grid Poll
Western State College was 15th
1Wednesday in the weekly United
Press International small college
football ratings. The Mountaineers
had one first place vote and 30
points.
Wittenberg set the pace with 12
votes for top spot and 245 points.
�-
DOWNTOWNER MOTOR INNS
�From:
C
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I
�([him!lO CU'ribnnt
I3
SE CTION
SPORTS • BUSINESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1964
~
BRAVES DELAY REQUEST FORTRANSFER
lJ. S. Meets Russia for Basket
Title~BOWTORESTRAININGORDER:
~ Mil-wau- kee-Sa-y
s -,80 -Lon-g' ~,
GILES TOCALL 20 MEETING
Fri ck I s Asked I
to Clear Rights
to Atlanta
Hockey Standings \
NiTIONAL LEAGUE
Monltt ol
TaraMo
W. L. T. Pll. 0 . O.G.
• • • 2 o 2 6 13 I
••• ••• •• •• . 2
•CHICAGO
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6 17 10
S 14 I D
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7 21
LAST NfGHT'S RESULTS
i:::ni;~~; ~~!::iJ:
Braves to Atlanta was post· advised they are under a re-
~irna1~int;1: lur~~;~:~.
~utci:b
straining order not to make
officials expressed hope that the any request for a shift of (ran.move will be made as soon as chise."
the legal entanglements are
Giles said, however, that the
cleared up.
Braves had asked Baseball
Warren Giles, Na t ional league Commissioner Ford Frick this
1:
~::143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) a::~f:!m1~~
league meeting that the Braves
did not ask the league to vole
on the proposed switch today
because " they just have been
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - , ,
morning for permission to move
into the Atlanta territory and
that he had been given authority by the league's club owners to call another special meet,.
ing as soon as the Braves feel
they are legally free to make
their transfer request.
Will Consult Attorneys
Wi l I i a m C. Bartholomay,
chairman o( the board of the
•Mempbil st.. 11; MeNee1e, must play all their home games
Iowa Central. 11; CarCbage, ,
Kalamazoo, 27; •o llvet, I.
2·
•
in Milwaukee County stadium
Vaaderbllt, . thru the 1965 season.
Kan~a,, 16; •Oklahoma S&., o. 1·
I The club owners listened to
::!on6; 2 ~ =~~:
7. • Mississippi St .• 29; Houston, : a half - hour plea to keep the
!:
TR!Rt'NE STAFFED
Mis1J11ippi, 27;
•Nor th Carolllla, 21;
Lakel~nd , 12; •Chicago DUni ,
Soa111 : : :
Oilnols, 28; U. C. L. A,, IS, 7.
Carolina, 7.
Penn St .. It; •\Veit Vlrlglna,
•Michiga n, 19; Minaesota, 14. Luther. 33: •Wartburg, 7.
' "arleUa. 28: Otterbein, 12. 14.
•Mkbigu St. • Z3; Northwest•Marshall,
14;
Lolllsvllle,
o.
j
Richmond 12; -Eut Carollern u,,
fO.l , 14: ' Obio l (, 13. na, O. .
11 •Notre Dame. 27; Stanford, Miami
Milton, 10; · Eureka, 1.
• vtrgima. 14; North Carolina
1
II.
St.. 8.
•f)hio St., 25; Wisconsin, H . •Missouri. 12; Iowa St., I .
•Mount Union, 21: Hiram, 8.
Virginia Military, 21l ; David·
l'urd:ue, 9; Iowa, 6.
•Muskingum,
22;
Wooster,
15,
son, 13.
17
MIDWE ST
Ne braska, 38· COlora4o, IZ,
Wil~am & HM,. 12: •Geerge
to
~for th C e n t r a 1, 13; "Nortli: Wasb1ngton, t.
Adrian . 13; •Alma, 0
I
Albion. ZO; ' Hope, 6
Park. 7.
'Northern Illianil. 20; EastAntle-non 17· Mencbelter, I .
SOUTIIWEST
Arkamas, tJ: Wk:ldle. e. al
chal
inH~i:::-t':c1:~dbl,
of the Mil
COUDb'
rman
bDard
of
1111
~
1"bo ~ , Oar 1ep1 poa~
tion Is tavlndble.'
• If this league and you. gen.tlemen consent to 8 francbi8e
shift " Grobschmidt told the
own; rs, 1'the National League
of professional Baseball Clubs
itself, and each member club,
must allO be aubjected to extended llli8ation.
- - --
�Governor J h
on W
· ReYnofds
~~
PROGRESS
~r-'W -~ ~
- { # - ~- ~ I
~ ~-:br ;tJl)lv I
I
'
Senator William Proxmire
J,;~~l~
. , ~ ~r ~
t
~ I V ~
·1
l
�Increased
Individual
PERSONAL INCOME
PERSONAL INCOME
23 °/c since 1958rose more than $2o 380 in 1963.
[rom $1,936 ~~ PERSONAL IN·
This year to~
. will top the
E · w 1sconsm
.
COM _m
·k £or the first ume.
$10 billion ma1
$2,400 r----r---r--t---t--
• State aid to local schools increased by $36 million-a boost
of 100%
2.300 t---+---t--+2,200
t---+----
-
• Democra ts developed mental health program-one of the
nation's best-county hospital aids up $3 million, number
of beds in state colonies up 2,000 by 1966
~-L-----:---11
0-
0
.-
N
Rapid
M
°' ...°'"° °'"° °'..."° ...°'"°
• Democra tic governors created greatest conservation program
in America-budget up 66 %-new Outdoor Recreation Pro7
gram saved forests, lakes, streams worth $12 million
II)
ECONOMIC GROWTH
·obs in
d thousands of new ]
0
create . manu fac turing - 3,20
Wisconsin
Newly-built factory
in 1963 alone.
l d 6 2 million
ear tota e
.
d
l
Y
space ast
an. all-time recor .
square feet,
1 e will reach
· g vo um
Manufactunn .
d in 1964-UP
$r, 4 billion estimate '
J.
01 [rom 1958.
almost 42 10
• Democra ts won fight for "one person-one vote"
• $10 million needed Tax Relief for 150,000 Wisconsin citizens
over 65-a Democratic victory
Healthy
ECONOMIC GROWTH
• Careful planning by Democrats saved taxpayers $3 million in
building costs-Democrats bui_lt $240 million in buildings
for colleges
$6.0 r---r--r---;--1---t
5.5 r-----r-t---t--+-----1
5.0 r-----r-t---t--+-,
L-----------t1
4.5 r---+----1r--+4.0
but what about
the farmer,
the workingman?
PROSPERITY
Auth o ri zed and p a id fo r by Th e Democra tic
Pa rtv of Wis., J ohn Durand , Field Di rector, 207
E. , vas hin gton A1·e., M adi so n, Wis.
. • . l
�The Democratic Party is the party of
the farmer and the workingman
VOTE
FOR THE FARMER it will continue to work for
• Higher milk supports
• Low interest loans for buying
machinery
e Keeping Food for Peace and
Food Stamp programs
• Crackdown on pricefixing by big food firms
PROCiRESS
~ -~~
FOR THE WORKINGMAN it will continue
~~-~
to support
~ _;to-~
• More workers protected
with unemployment pay
• More compensation pay
President Lyndon B. Johnson
• Minimum wage law for all
workers
• Retraining ancl public works
programs
IN
1964
Senator
Proxmire
W·mam
1
~
L~ "o/Yu-ai,tTP
.,
~
~
r
~
~ 4 / ~
�COOLER
•
* * * * * FINAL
34 PAGES- 3 PARTS
Bans State Sales
I
TODAY
the News
THE CITY
C. WHITNEY, city budget supervisor, .reported
EDWIN
that 1965 appropriations approved for city departments so far will require an increase in the city tax rate.
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The Milwaukee Braves have made no commitments to
leave the city, and never have had any such offer to move,
John McHale, president of the team, said.
A 14 year old Milwaukee boy was killed and a 15 year
old companion injured seriously w hen the stolen car in
which they were riding careened out of control during a
police chase and crashed int o a tree in Whitefish Bay,
police said. The dead boy was Robert Stenzel, 4466 N.
28th st.
•• • •
Voters in the Elmbrook school district approved a $4,-
535,000 bond issue for school construction and refinancing
of Joans. A total of $3,885,000 is to be used for a new
junior high school and an addition to Pilgrim Park junior
high in Elm Grove.
• * •
THE STATE
party at its meeting in Madison adoptTedHE aRepublican
state platform opposing a general sales tax on
food, clothing and prescription d rugs. The plat form reflects the views of GOP gubernatorial Mminee Warren
Knowles .
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Democrats quickly finished their official business at
their statutory platform convention in Madison and then
adjourned to the Loraine hotel there to get down to the
serious business of tellmg candidates how to beat the
Republicans m ovember.
• • •
THE NATION
NO COMMITMENTS, McHALE
SAYS
.
Braves Deny ·Move
Offers
He said that certain factors
000 annual i n c o m e for the
Braves.
have entered the picture to
In a later interview with The
"help us make up our mind."
Sentinel, McHale said that the
These factors, he said, were
Braves might have made a deMcHale also said that "we
an offer frim the county board
cision about moving earlier in
have nE.ver had any offer, as
to renegotiate the Stadium conthe s e a s o n, ' but then " we
such, to go anywhere."
wouldn't have had anything
tract, giving the ball club all
from Schlitz or the county."
concession revenues, and a new
McHale appeared on a taped
radio. and television offer from
Mchale commented that peotelevised news conference, "The
the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co.
ple probably will say that, "You
Bobby Bragan S h Cl w" on
have used t his to bargain."
It is estimated that both offers
WTMJ-TV, The Journal Comwould mean an additional $250,"But this isn't true," he said.
pany station.
________________________________...:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The Milwaukee Braves have
made no commitments to move
out of the city, John McHale,
Braves' president, said Tuesday.
•
Heredity is what makes the
mother and fat her of teen ,
agers pause at times to wonder a little about each other•
(By carrier,
45 cents w eekly )
on Food, Clothes
.
In
TODAY'S CHUCKLE
TEN CENTS
WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964
-
• • •
INEL
MILWAUK_E
Sunny, coo I e r Wednesday and Wedn·esday night.
High Wednesday midfifties.
Maps and tables on page i.
"We have never implied that
we were dissatisfied."
He sa id that the B i· aves
have had no "subsidy offer"
from any other city.
-Spells Out
Views of
KnOwles
He later commented that his
earlier use of the word "subsidy" in regard to the county
offer was an unfor tunate one.
It should instead be called an
Turn to Page 8, Co l. 4
_ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
By RICHARD BRADEE
Sentinel Madison Bureau
Madison, Wis.-A new state
platform, spelling out opposition to a general sales tax on
food, clot hing and prescription drugs, was a<lopted T esday by the Republican pa t~·
to reflect the views of W arren Knowles, the party's candidate for governor,
The document spelled out in
detail what Knowles a nd other
candidates for state offices
hope to accomplish if elected
in November. It is different.
from cover to co\'cr, fro m the
platform adopted b> the st11te
Republican convention in Milwaukee in May.
The action was taken at the
party's statutory platform con\·ention, a meeting of candi·
dates for state·\\·ide offices and
the legislature. Normally, the
statutorv con\'ention adopts the
platform written earlier b>· thf'
rnluntary party organization in
state convention.
The new platform prop0sccl
mam· specific piecPs of leg1slat1()n. Included ere proposal
to
I • Stabilite the tax hase with,
lnut
ncrnl 1le ~ on fnorl,
clllth!ng net presl I t•on dru
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�TELEPHONE
MESSAGE
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Name----------------------Telephone No. _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ __
D
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Wants you to call
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Is here to see you
Returned your call
0
Came by to see you
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Left the following message:
Date :_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ T ime _ _ _ _ _ _ _ a . m. / p. m.
By---- -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - FORM 25•5
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�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2 •4463
Linda Hammond
�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2•4463.
Linda Hammond
�WE KNOW OF NO MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CLUB WE WOULD RATHER HAVE IN
ATLANTA THAN THE MILWAUKEE BRAVES AND URGE YOUR FAVORABLE
CONSIDERATION 1_~
WE PLEDGE OUR FULL SUPPORT _;:l!J.!fflb
�-OFFICE OF INSPECTOR OF BUILDINGS
MEMO
From the desk of - -
October 15, 1964
W. R. Wofford, Inspector of Buildings
TELEGRAM
MR. WILLIAM Co BARTHOLOMAY
THE BOIi.DING OF ATLANTA NOW AND IN THE
FU1URE IS MY JOB AND MAIN CONCERNo
I
POINT WITH PRIDE TO OUR RECORD OF
UNSURPASSED GROWTH THIS YEAR.
WE ARE
A GROWING, ENTHUSIASTIC AND BRAVE CITY,
AND IT WOULD BE OUR PLEASURE TO HAVE
THE BRAVES JOI N US IN OUR GREAT FU1UREo
Wo Ro WOFFORD
BUI LDING OFFICIAL
CI TY OF ATLANTA
�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2 •4463
R. Earl Landers
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�December ll. 1964
Mr.
arz n. C . Gile , Pre id nt
T
National League of
Profe icmal B
ball Clubs
C r w To e r
Cincinnati 2, Ohio
r
D
r . Gile :
We
ry grateful for our l tter of Deeember 8th
r ly ho that Atl ta will be c
id red f r
jor Le gue meetin i 1966. J am sui-e yo
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be
ring from our Con ntio Bur u reg rdin
formal mvUati •
ry effort to hav a s cce afw o n1A
1966
1 c r inly ho y
e rly date o yo
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r
diu.m.
ith be t
bh
fo.r th holida •eaa
I am
Sincerely y<>ur ,
l
'lAJr/ r
CC:
M r. Fur m a n Bisher
M r . Wa l t er Cr awford
Jr.•
D
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�Th e NATIONAL LEAGUE o,
PROFESSIONAL BAs EBALL CLuss
CAREW
TOWER
CINCINNATI 2 , OHIO
December 8, 1964
Hon. Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor, City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Mayor Allen:
This will acknowledge telegram sent to me at Shamrock
Hilton Hotel, Houston, extending an invitation to the Major Leagues
to hold their convention in Atlanta in 1966. The invitation was
extended by me to our League in session at our Annual Meeting and
Bill Bartholomay urged our League to accept the invitation.
Mr. John Galbreath, President of the Pittsburgh Baseball
Club, extended an invitation on behalf of Pittsburgh and inasmuch
as Pittsburgh had been in the League for many years and had not
been selected as a c onvention site for many, many years it was the
sentime nt of our League that Pittsburgh ,be given the preference.
Another matter which influenced the selection of Pittsburgh
was the indication that the minor league convention would be held
in Columbus, Ohio in 1966 and we try and meet in a major l e ague
city as near the site of the minor l eague convention as appears
practicable.
I hope to get to Atlanta sometime this spring to see the
beautiful new s tadium you are c onstructing and which I am happy
t o know will be the hom e of the Braves in 1966.
Sincere ly yours,
/7
~ a~_,e,.C.-- ~l,/
Warren C. Gil es
President
WCG/akm
L
I
l
�CLARK COLLEGE
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
C O PY
C O PY
Octobe r 16, 1964
2:25 p. m.
TELEGRAM
Mr . Wil liam c. Bart holomay
Milwaukee Braves Baseball Team
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
ATLANTA POTENTIALLY GREAT CITY FOR PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL. TREMENDOUS NEW
STADIUM UNDER CONSTRUCTION. GROWING POPULATION NOW OVER MILLION. PROSPEROUS BUSINESS ENTERPRISES, BOOMING ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
ALONG WITH GREAT LOVE OF SPORTS ASSURE ENTHUSIASTIC SUPPORT AND FINANCIAL
SUCCESS. HOPE MILWAUKEE BRAVES WILL MAKE ATLANTA NEW HOME.
James P. Brawley
President, Clark College
Atlanta, Georgia
�News Release
IVAN
ALL E N ,
M ayo r
For further information call -
Ja
2 - 4463
of Atlanta
Mrs. A nn Drummond
E x e cutive Secretary
October 20, 1964
FOR USE UPON RECEIPT
STATEMENT BY IVAN ALLEN., JR 91 MAYOR OF ATLANTA
The Braves are to be congratulated on making a brave decision • • •
to petition the National League to move their franchis e to Atlanta,
They have chosen to make the
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national pastime" truly national,
to give the 24 million people who live in thes e seven Southe aste rn States a
share in the major leagues.
The people of Atlanta, with t heir courage in building an $18, 000 , 000.
S t a diu m to att r act a major league team are also to be congratulate d.
They
re p res ent the n e w, dynamic south, which is no longer willing to b e side- lined
on the back benches .
Our Stadium is a s outhe rn pr oject, built on souther n soil, with
s ou th ern money, by southe rn a rchitects and c ontracto rs.
We feel it i s uniquely fitting that t his decision ha s been made t oday,
a date which marks alm ost e x actly .the centennial of the day when A tlanta
was left a n a s h s trewn ruin , sym bol of a re gion 's d efe a t.
Today we welcome t h e opportunity to become a s ymbol of southern
zest and drive, a major lea gue city, a major le a gue state, in a major league
regiono
- 30 -
JR .
�TELEGRAMS TO:
MR. WILLIAM C. BARTHOLOMAY
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRAVES, INC.
2 NOR TH RIVERSIDE PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
�THE GREAT MET ROPOLITAN ATLANTA AREA WOULD LIKE TO WELCOME
YOUR FINE BALL CLUB HERE ST AR TING NEXT YEAR. EXCELLENT SUPPORT WILL
BE YOURS IN 1965 AND FUTURE YEARS.
IDPLEDGE MY PERSONAL EFFORTS
FOR .ATTENDANCE SUCCESS.
CHARLES HENSON,
TAX ASSESSOR
CITY OF ATLANTA
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I J OIN THOUSANDS OF OTHER BASEBALL ENTHUSIASTS OF THIS CITY IN
URGING YOU TO BRING tHE M I LWAUKEE B!tAVES TO .ATLANTA. A WARM
WELCOME AND OUR SUPPORT AWAIT THEM.
CHIEF C. H . HlLDEBRJIIII)
ATLANTA FIRE DEPARTMENT
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WITH SIX MILLION OF YOUR POTENTIAL FANS USINO THE ATLANI' A AIRPORT
THIS YEAR, WE EXPRE SOUR FERVENT HOPE TH.AT YOU WILL TAKE THE
NECESSARY STEPS TO BRING THE BR.AVES TO .ATL.ANT
AND MAKE THIS
POTENTIALITY A REALITY.
GRADY H. RlDOEW AY, GEN RAL ANAO R
THE .ATLANTA MUNICIPAL AIRPO T
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�MY OPINION IS THAT NO CITY IN THE COUNTRY WOULD SUPPORT THE
BRAVES LIKE AT LANTA.
COME ON DOWN, WE NEED YOU.
ERNEST J . BREWER
PURCHASING AGENT
CITY OF ATLANTA
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NOT ONLY ATLANTA BASEBALL FANS BUT ALSO THOSE FROM THBOUGHOUT
THE ENTIRE SOUTHEAST ARE ANXIOUS TO HA VE A MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
TEAM IN OUR OWN SECTION THAT WE CAN SUPPORT. WE TRUST THAT THE
MILWAUKEE BRAVES WILL BE THAT TEAM.
C.ARL T . SUTHERLAND
PERSONNEL DIRECTOR
Cl TY OF ATL.ANT A
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COME ON BRAVES.
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COME TO ATLANTA WHERE PROGRESS IS A HABIT
ND OUR
PEOPLE WAIT WI TH OPEN ARMS.
J. HOW ARD MONROE
Cl TY HALL UPERINTENDENT
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IT TO MOVE BR.AVES TO ATLANTA NEXT Y A • EXCELL NT
.ATTENDANCE A SURED.
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�ATLANTA BRAVES FANS ARE EAGERLY AWAITING YOUR FAVORABLE
DECISION TO GIVE ATLANTA BIG LEAGUE BASEBALL.
JUDGE HERSCHEL COLE
TRAFFIC COURT
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ATLANTA IS THE HUB OF THE SOUTHEAST.
WOULD WELCOME THE BRAVES.
ITS CITIZENS LOVE SPORTS AND
COME TO .ATLANTA AND WE ' LL BACK "iOU
TO THE HILT.
S. W. GRAYDON
SANITARY ENGINEER
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ACCORDING TO NEWS REPORTS, THERE IS A POSSIBILITY THAT THE BP.AVES
MIGHT MOVE TO ATLANTA.
THIS IS WONDERFUL NEWS AS A DYNAMIC TE.AM
SUCH AS THE BRAVES COULD NOT FIND A ClTY AS DYNAMIC AND SPORTS ..
MINDED AS ATLANTA.
!HEREBY MAKE A STRONO PERSONAL PEEA URO~Ci
THE BRAVE MOVE TO ATLANTA.
PAUL B. IVEY
LAND AGENT
CITY OJr ATLANTA
�THE BR.AVES' FANS Wll.,L HAVE A NEW FREEWAY SYSTEM OF SIX lNTERSTATE
HIGHWAYS PLUS .A NEW MAJOR THOROUGHFARE SYSTEM TO BRING THEM TO
SEE ALL HOME GAMES IN THE NEW ATLANTA STADIUM. WE liYlLL WELCOME
YOU TO ATLANTA • .
KARL A . VBEVINS
CITY TRAFFIC ENGINEER
CITY OF ATLANTA
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EARNESTLY URGE YOUR FAVORABLE CONSIDERATION OF AN OPPORTUNITY
TO ESTABLISH A TRULY GREAT TEAM IN A MOST PROMISlNG GEOGRAPHICAL
AREA .
HOMER W. TOWNSEND
SUPERINTENDENT
MOTOR TRANSPORT DEPARTMENT
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THE BRAVES WILL HAVE IN ATL.ANT .A, AMONG OTHER NUMEROUS ADV.ANT AGES,
THE BEST POLICE DEPARTMENT IN THE NATION AT THEIR DI POSAL.
WE
URGE YOUR EVERY CONSIDERATION OF OUR OFFER.
CHlEF HERBERT T • .JENKINS
ATLANTA POLICED
ARTMENT
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THE LIB A Y FAMILY OF ATLANTA U OES YOU TO MA
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�ATLANTA IS BIG LEAGUE IN EVERY WAY .
JACK C . DELIUS
GENERAL MANAGER
CITY OF ATLANTA PARKS AND RECREATION
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ATLANTA IS THE GREATEST SPORTS CITY IN THE ENTIRE SOUTHEAST AND
A MAJOR L E.AGUE BASEBALL TEAM WOULD BE ANOTHER GREAT .ASSET TO
nus WO NDERFUL
CITY.
I AM QUITE SURE THAT THE PEOPLE OF ATLANTA
WILL SUPPORT A TEAM LIKE THE MILWAUKEE BRA VES, AND I WILL
PERSON.ALLY GI VE THEM ALL THE SUPPORT I POSSmL Y CAN.
CHARLES L . MATHEWS
MUNICIPAL REVENUE COLLECTOR
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ATLANTA NEEDS BlG LEAGUE TE.AM FOR A B IO LEAGUE TOWN ..... URGE
THAT YOU BRING BRAVES TO ATLANTA;
ALDERMAN Eo GREGO Y OlUGG
CITY OF ATLANTA
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NO Cl TY IN AMEl\ICA CAN MATCH ATLANi:t'A'
DYNAMIC OROWTH AND
ENTHUSIASM ...... NOR PRO VI DE A BETTER HOME FOR THE BRAVE •
.ALDERMAN J. M. FLANIG N
Cl TY O .ATL.ANT A
�CONSTRUCTION OF NEW STADIUM IN RECORD TIME INIIICATES
I NT ERE ST IN MAJOR LE.AGUE BASEBALL .
ATLANTA'
SUCH INTEREST WILL ASSURE
SUCCESS FOR THE BRAVES IN OUR CITY.
ALDERMAN CHARLIE LEFTWICH
CITY OF ATLANTA
THE BUILDING OF ATLANTA NOW AND IN THE FUTURE ts MY JOB AND MAIN
CONCERN.
l POINT WITH PRIDE TO OUR RECORD OF UNSURPASSED GROW1'RH
THIS YEAR.
WE ARE A GROWINQ ENTHUSIASTIC .AND BR.AVE CITY,. AND IT
WOULD BE OUR PLEASHRE TO HAVE THE BRAVES J'OIN US IN OUR ORE.AT FUTURE.
W. R . WOFFORD
B UILDINO OFFI Cl.AL
Cl TY OF ATLANTA
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WE KNOW OF NO MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CLUB WE WOULD RATHER HAVE
IN ATIA NTA THAN THE MILWAUKEE BRAVES AND UR.GE YOUR FAVORABLE
CONSIDERATION. WE PLEDOE OUR FULL SUPPORT.
J. J. LITTLE
CITY CLERK
CI TY OF ATLANTA
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ENTHUSl.AM FOR MAJOR LE.AGUE BASE .ALL I
WE A E READY TO UPl?O T THE BR.AVES.
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AT A PEAK lN ATLANTA ... ~ ..
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�Mr. William C. Bartholomay
. 2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
We want to urge your acceptance of the invitation to bring the Milwaukee
B:raves to Atlanta next yea:r.
Alderman Milton G. Farrif.J
Atlanta, Georgia
-···---------··---·-------------~-----·-------~~-~•~-·-------···-~Mr. William C. Bartholomay
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, lllinol
It ie a ple sure to join with citizens from throughout thi atate and
particulat-ly thos in Atlanta to extend a warm invil tion ia mak thi
your home ,ad to be a. pa.rt of gre t and growin m jor part 0£
tomorrowj'a aport world.
Sam Ma sell, Jr., Vice Mayor
City of Atl nt
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Mr. William C. B rtbol a>. y
Z North Riv r lde Pla~a
Chica o, llllnoia
Atla ta w lcome the opp rtunity to ho•t your dl•tlllaui• d
a ball t am.
W h · :v
modern phy1ical 1tadlwn. Our gov rnrn t ls rec ptlve t
o:rt1 proaram. Our cltt na and nel n ot• provide an ideal
e c foi- profe alo 1 baseball.
P ul Web, G n r l Ma
Atl nt Water W l'ka
a•r
�M:r. William C. Bartholomay
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chic go, Illinois
I urge your a·c ce
nee of Atlanta' offe..- to bring the Br ve t o Atlanta.
This will be a tremendous boo tin the arm to the spc,tting world nd the
entire outheast.
Alderm n Douglas L. Fowlke
City of Atlantia
�Cabl e A ddress ,
Royal Crown Cola Co.
COLUMBUS , GEORGIA
December 1, 19 64
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
I want to thank you for the time and courtesies shown to Al
Roach and myself this past week in your office. It was a
pleasure meeting you after knowing of you for so many years
through Ian Stalker. We were raised in the same neighborhood.
Again, I would like to congratulate you, Mayor Allen, on
making an outstanding contribution to Atlanta, Georgia, and
the Southeast, by bringing the Milwaukee Braves to Atlanta.
All of us will benefit from your efforts.
We, of the Royal Crown Cola Co., as I stated in your office,
stand ready to do what we can to insure the success of major
league baseball and football. We hope you will convey this
interest to the Atlanta Braves. They will really belong to all
Georgians almost as much as to Atlanta!
Another point I would like to reiterate , Mayor Allen , is our
desire as a Georgia company , to sell our products in our
capitol city on a non-ex clusive basis . We only want the
opportunity to have our product s available along wit h other
Georgia companies. You have indicat ed this opportunity is
available t hrough the Braves , so we will pursue t his course .
ROYAL CROWN COLA
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NEHI
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PAR -T - PAK
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DIET· RITE
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UPPER 10
RO YA LCROWN
�Royal Crown Cola Co .
CON T INUING
A
L E T TER
TO :
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
DA T ED
PAG E
December l , 19 64
Two
Again, let me say it was a pleasure meeting you, and we, in
Columbus I wish you every success, good health, and a happy
holiday season. Kindest personal regards.
Si~c]ly~
Director
Department
JBC:ntg
�December 9, 1964
Mr, William Parr
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
Commerce Building
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Bill:
Relative to sending Christmas gift subscriptions or
the Atlanta Magazine to some or the directors of the
Braves, here are the names:
Mr. William C. Bartholomay
Alexander & Alexander
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chic go, Illinois 60606
Mr. Delbert W. Col man
Seaburg Corp.
1500 North D yton
Chicago, Illinois
Mr. H.M. H rper, Jr.
8200 Lehigh
Morton Grove, Illinois
Mr. W rr
n
H ·11man
Lahm n Broth rs
On Willi rn Stre t
New York 4, N.Y.
Mr. John J. Lou1,
1000 Hill Rod
Winn t , Ill1no1
Mr. John MeHale
P.O. Box 1122
Atlanta, a org1
Mr. Charles W. Olson, III
c.w. Olson & Comp ny
175 w st Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, Ill1no1s
Mr. Pott r Palm r
1310 North Gr enb y Road
Lak For t, Illinois
Mr. Louie P r1n1
Perin1 Corp.
Mont W yt ·
Fr mingh m, M ss.
Jr.
Mr. Ch rl s H. Pr1c
Pric c ndy comp ny
2 W st 39th Str t
n
City, Mi aouri
�( Page 2)
Mr . Thomas A. Reynolds , Jr .
Winston , St rawn , Smith & Patt erson
38 South Dearborn Street
Chicago, I l linois
Ml' . Daniel c. Searle
G.D . Searle & Company
P. O. Box 5110
Chicago 80, I llinois
Mr . Rushton w. Skakel
Great Lakes Carbon Corp .
18 E t 48th Str t
New York 17, N. Y.
Mr. John w. Sullivan
Sk1l Corp.
5033 North Elston Avenue
Chio go, Illinois
I assume thee nam son b
dd d to your 111 111ng 11 t
1n ti
for th J nuary 1a u , Ple s
nd 14 of your
dvi ory Chr1etma c rds to me for the Mayor to· ign nd
nd to th
bov r c1p1 nt ~- nd pleas be ur th
r not duplio ted from your off1c .
You
prino
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Siner ly,
P ggy
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Tu:! srn y
Jim: 11.e your query AboHt any attitudes I might ha 'JP. t·nGountered about i he
Brave8.
Jn Phoenix T talked with (~:~T!:r ~-~-'~!f: l)c;>_E~--' --~.b~- ~!'.at.:.~~ erllt.or _'.?Ll_h~ll!.J..Y§l:.U\~~-e
S£~t:i. ry_!:l, an~ An'illr: ·~0.1.~\J143.215.248.55L, the HE _?-f _tJw . 1:!i;l,,_Jc;mrp!-!:l, am11t ti~ Brc1ves.
/1..<: a IT\9. ttn r <'f'
fc: d, eve ryh0rly wrrntecl tn t1. l \r to t. rem a bout t,he sj tlla t. j on.
_I have \mown _b o l.li "l"n for a lonF' ti rTf! 1 t' pivc 5 ,:,nnP.l:ir:,rn 1 '.'. t-1·nthf_ir hi.s fjnit Jo b
wlwn 1--e got. Nrt, , ,(' l:i.rh:i.gan Sl-1!.p so T nm cr!rtPin th 11 t t.heir r0111,n·kri we.re
si:1ce1"('. _,
nn'1 nn~ r e .'1.77~· l:, 11r,r.rd cihout 1-.,b~ Bn:11R.s a nJ rr· r· rrnized bR~eb'.lll. arr.' are
n a mr ocl 1, n 11,trt. Ur: 11r::- 1·p s :tr- p·11d1 a ::i pos s ible. Sonneborn 5aid, "Ir,lclg:irn•
'rlfl;).t f e ('li nc ·•, [1 (, - ,:H'"~·- !'1 ' ( Iii '-' l\'.i !' eh .'.\' "1 Hri l..r_•r '.-::·, ,. , ,~ 11,"\Jll? I don't l'eC-1.~l.)
rrust. !-rive I, ,, he ·.-,ith out a j oli af't r> J' 1~c,v , rin·.'. taGeba l l in Milwau l:GP. for
t hir-1,y-sPrn" }T ,1.1' $ ~.:e wnn 't 1-~'l"" : _n, · 1,,;.; m D fl,<,r a yJ:! ;ir."
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c it.-,- c. nrl ,-, ·, n ty r-tif f-i.ci;:i l s , th1~ \.l u ~d1 ·(':-J1: , .0 11111111 n-i ty L~ un i te d in t.h,:-- erfort.
t:,h• f.' r n ves t,hrn 11 :'.h Lh ~ n=-· :<~- ye al'.
to h"n · on tn
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t en,n, ::: '., e .::..1 iL wa r, t-hr-• t<:• m curru"TJ,··n~i 11;,0d . Thc',V don 't 1il:·i1'1e /\ tl;1~tc'l ~ c:11we
H , a ;ip ..; ~···th"t the l1r rt1.· (.!G ~:e m m i nf· t.. , ;,,o v e s ri 111ror l:1.r' p :i.n::-wa:: , hut t h, ·,v
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Clri ff ll.l I h u rr 1 clly r'1 OVI-' d 111.s (: l uT/ t 0 /.' i_n '"' c1 r, li '.' t ,i t :i 1<r :-1 , hri 11 L;:, r.e r1 f t, h..1. t. , '-I
TV t..crritr,r ;v , LI-Bt tllf' cw :--:P. r c- h,, r,<1:11r f r i. Ph t r-r, c ··1 •JI' t-lie con:;" 1n cn c':!s a r,rl
s t., ~ k r n·)th -r c lnh i_n W·,t h:in~<'n. Th• ;: .: "?re a n d .rl o f f'.nvs rrn re nt ~dd l i n r .
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pr o f-Q"',, T" f'or a rv era l )•,nr.-: i n t he f1J·t,ure . Tlrn t w:i l l
ci t, i er~ ,1 r h:i n ,y, Vi f.'.'I:~, re::trl;v. Wheth P. r i t, wiU
a f'fec t t r,:-, At 1_;:in t n rno vn , T ,_Jo n' L kn ow . Tod s n:r-:-. t·.11 ,1t, Rfl0 i s n,Jl in a f{P')rl
µos i t.5.rn brc a11De ·cy , P-u t i:-;hu r ~h, and Cl<~ve l ,'.i r~-J e n rt•r ,·t c h on 01Jr TV
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as s i.en t,,)rdLoz·y 1. rrl r_r;i '71?
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ND . lfr• l ol rJ JT)2 1. 1-e 1-. h0 h:1A fl\(Wed h:i f: tam:ily t n T•'l. or-idc1
inn t i Jfl.t 1--e rlc\ G t,"l kf>!1 ,"l !1 a p~ rl Tfl n n t i 11 (_' }1
i Ci-\ I?() W}Y! n: th ri C l11r 1 ha<; ll)Q1Tf' d i tr;
nffices . Hp sni rl , ;i o ki ru· l~, , l,fr • t. h 0 ::n0:-1.ks bal;k t o ~U l wau k e~ nmf1r c r·,ver , f'
dri. rk 11e::;s b ut
J t h in k he ·,.;·•::- 11 !·. t, ~,rjn, r1oro truth Lh 1rn poe t ry .
r
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Mclla.l ('. s;-i.ys th~ ,- ,le Ilr, 1 k 1s ritizer ·:; (.l ~; i lwn.11 ke c clo n' t care wh,-i, h er ·l, he
\ llravps ~t::iy nr n nt b11L t,h,i I. t.Jic, r n L'il, i c i::irn amcl city fat h ers ::ir~ adamant .•
HfJ sail i.r\3t trlf' TTny0. r of Atlant a (T think lt was trw rnayo r but if n"fi:. thf'
m.'l.:,or SOTll(:' ot,'-x,r hJ !_' h dt _- · ofri.,,lal.) ca1lE1ri the mayor ot' Mllwankee to
,n ·r an ge a quiPt rne eti n1~ :in r,h \.c clfTO t 0 try ani ta1 k t i~ matt er out an::l reach
s omf> conclusions. The Milwauke e may or went to the rot e l wiU1 several ofL, 1 b
lilas not in a c r,mpr0nl.sing mood, He ev?n 8Ummoned the press , a ccnrrl ' nc
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to Jolmiv, and that preolu.ded any ·chanoo of arbitration. MoRale did noli
appear "'r.Y' .oonfid~~ about 001r4Jletil\l the roan fee next •eaeon.
'
SyJ!i)&thetic to ·
Jv p':l r d~rtal feeling is that . tho oporta fan 1a
1ilwau}C&e -whio.h ·me be en a g:re at epOl'te town. The;, broke attendan01 reoorda,
ve~
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a m w .... ota di'9Jl1 won a pennant
rOTerbi.al· bag •
am
n<JW will be left boldifV tbt
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Ao Sonri@borh Ilia.id, ·'Whit n LOll ~~rini brought th!, Brane to MilwaukBe, there wu
still a' bu lxu l ~Qlll lAttt in Bc-, t an. I think tb9n 111 a poaaibility of
gove rnioont int erve nticn into organiJled ball it tbl Bnvw• go along with
a Milwauk a-be-~
d at t 1t \d. •
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a aou.rt teat of t he,
re1ernt olaUllle wbioh keepa
the bill play-er. ~ ·'.eona t bi.ng a.kin to peonage ""f .:
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· rm· culprit
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1n the lid.nor•.
i s te le'rl.eion. Snrl.te quote d a r ~ ure whicll I don't recnll
but it w a ...,'lll)thing llko tlE Yankees ooke
mone1 on te~Tis ion
t han l2 oi.hef lTWljor ~~ Jtgue clubs nake ooll1ng t.ickete • .lm the Yanks,
t1:.~
of c ou.n. e, keep it :-e,t. It they split the loot like tm pro football
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leagu., 1 tm re vo uJ4foo no Milwmilw e Jroblem.
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~wer~ )"O\ll' qu8-l"l_'•• •••
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WINSTON. STRAWN, SMITH'& PATTERSON
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FIRST NATIONAL BANK BU ILDIN G
EUR Ol' tAN
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CHICAGO 60603
rnro H . DAUC.HE lll y
R . L AWq(N Cr Sl o n MS
THOM .O S A . REY NO LDS . J R .
D"-VIO C KEC;J\N
C'O ~ M . SOWERS
JA WF.5 L . P[PKI NS
f"'\l .<.iAGD l rO O T E
?/\ V il .I H AA OY
FI N ANCIA L 6- 360 0
W I N ~ 1 r>A 'N~. !•/\'"l!-
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( flffAOrC'RO CO OK
IHC.HAnD J BRE'NNAN
M r1NL EY M A X.SO N
,q - i-tuR I GOULD
NO RMAN WA1fE.Jl1
AOPEAT G LANI:'.
D . ~ I D NE Y C'ONU 11
Robert R. Richardsoc, Esq.
Hurt, Hill, Richardson
and Sosebee
William-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
Dear Bob:
This will confirm our conversation in connection
with the acquisition by Milwaukee Braves 9 Inc. of the
Atlanta franchise in the International League.
~he price
for the franchise is $285,000 of which $200,000 is a relocati on expense under the agreement between the Braves
and the Stadium Authority.
This will confi rm our agreement that after the 1965
baseball season is completed, the Braves will pay $50,000
to the Stadium Authority if they determine that they want
to operate the franchise in some location outside of
Atlanta.
The net effect of this transaction will be to
make the cost of the franchise $235,000.
It i s
the Braves
they will
$35,000 of
further understood that at some futu r ·e date i.1
sell this franchise for in excess of $50,000,
credit the Authority with up to the first
such excess.
The purpose of the foregoing unde r s t andings is t o ,
if at all possible, limit the cost of the franchise bo th
to the Braves and the Stadium Authority to $100,000 each.
Sincerely,
-- ?Thomas A. Rey nol d s , Jr.
TAR-Jr : CLO '
n r. -:; ·,. ,,
.q;r:, 1
December 1, 1964
AALC.--H M
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1.. Ht.l'.U'.$ ,t .. , . CP? IN I Jr~
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C;lA. NC. C Ht, USE n
EDM U ND J. K ENNY
C ALVI N r S llo1°JY1En
J ARDrN l?E'A R 1 C K
RICH AR D J rJ\L El Tl
FAANK 0. K~NH( '
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PAUL T . K ES SL EQ , JR.
CH AA L( S f" MARQUIS
ALEXANOf;h .J MQ :J D Y
BRUCE "1 S M T H
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�LAW OFFICES
HURT, HILL, RICHARDSON AND So SEBEE
WILLIAM-OLIVER BUILDING
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303
C HARLES D . HURT
JAMES C. HILL
ROBERT R . RICHARDSON
HUGH D . SOSEBEE
ROBERT L.TODD
C HARLES D. HURT, JR.
T ELEPHONE
524-7946
December 2, 1964
• Thomas A . Reynolds, Jr .
Winston, Strawn, Smith & Paterson
Attorneys at Low
First National Bank Building
Chica . o, Illinois 60603
Dear Tom:
In today' s maf.l w r c iv your I tt r of O cemb r 1 confirmin agr em nb
between Milwauke Braves, Inc . and th Stadium Authority with r f r nc to acquisition
of the Atlanta franchis • Your I tter r tot the rit r's understanding of the oral
agreem nt you had with Arthur Montgom ry, the Authority Chairman .
Arthur is out of th country, but will b bock in Atlanta a rl y n t w
By copy of this letter, I a m forward ing your I tt r along to him in c
commenb on this ogreem nt os xpr ss
With kindest
rsonal r
h has any
by oxchan e of corr pond nc •
ards, •
or
Cordially,
R R:cg
<:c:
yor
I.I n
k.
�hitney M. Young ·Jr"
Sh,igging N egro outfielder
Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee
Braves, one of the perrenial ter. rors of National League pitchet's, has voiced reserva tions
a bout playing in · Atlanta if
th'at's wher e his ballclub t urns
up next season.
Aa ron, w ho stroked 24 home
-.runs this year, knocked in ~5
runs and belted a r eSP,eotable
.328, is a valued asset t o his employers, who
apparently have wearied of (Milwa ukee even
il their star out,fielder has not.
ow ·he is t orn -b etween his loyalty to the
Braves and his obligations to his fam-i1y.
\He Is wontlerlng aloud about housing . conditions and other opportunities t here. 1 Wo uld
his children a ttend a s egregated · and inferior
school? Would t hey be rebuffed, s nubbed or
scarl'ed psychologically if the Braves play in ·
Georgia ?
"I just •won't step out on the field" if the
club moves there, he told a wire service reporter. "I Jcertainly don't like t he idea· of playing 111 Atlanta and I have no intention of taking my !amily· t here."
• • •
!His absence from t he Braves lineup might
eue the cares of rival National League mana gers 1but it would -be a severe blow to t he·
Braves.
It would also dash the hopes o! Atlanta's
Negro leaders who have worked tirelessly to
bring professlo11al baseball and· football clubs
to Geongla's first city.
_
They've labored in the conviction that integr ated pro teams would dramatically demonstrate what citizens of color can accomplish
given equal opportunlties.
.
It is • their hope that - Aaron's big bat and
superstar pop1,1larity' will help knock J im Crow
out of town.
Atlanta's NAACP Presiden
has writ ten Aaron asking hf
mind and play._
Atlanta, he said, ls a p t'ojpessive, bulffl
city where conditions are ltfll)roving stelldl
for Negroes.
'
Like other Negr.o leaders, Smith knows
tully that Atlanta has its shortcomings. Early
t his year, 54 signed a declaration calling for
impr ovements that would make · direct aot-1011
protests unn ecessa ry. They heeded Rev. Mal'tin i..tither King's warning that time was "running out" for Atlanta if it 41d not make more
rap id strides in race relations;
.
Since then, virtually all ·public· places were
"voluntarily" opened to N eg
-either by the
presence of · pickets, press u
from the Attorney G eneral's office, · pas!ftlte of the Civil
Rig hts Act or q uiet, <but e19ctive negotiati~
by the Urban League.
'
(Mayor I van Allen, who pleaded eloquently
for the Act in Congress, is· regarded as one of
. the Sout h's outstanding progressives w ho has
helped crea te · a· climate in which change can
be made peace~ully.
B ut Atlanta has a long way ·to go in bettering · its schools, housing· and job opportunities
for Negroes. · · ,
F or example, one-half of the city's renlal
·un its occu pied by Negroes· are substandard and
80 percent of the adult population over 25 years
. of a ge holds no high school diploma. .
'
For Aaron, the choice is difficult.
To him, doffing his Mt when the "Star
Spangled Banner" is piped over the loudspeaker
opening day in the city's ne'w $18,000,000 st!l.dium may prove bitter ironr,t It he fears for
t he welfare of his family.
But such a sacriflc is ee.rifestly desired by
Negro leaders who
h
fu l t hat his 'big
bat will help them h
an "Open City,"
one in which opporlllm.tita e translated Into
reality "for all. ··
'
.
.
�-
November 2 4, 1964
Mr. WhitnE:y M . Young , Jr .
14 East 48th Stree t
New York, New York 100017
Dear Mr. Young :
A friend of mine forwarded me a copy of your
article "Can a Negro Play Ball in Atlanta?" .
I think you have stated the matter very clearly
and I appreciate your careful consi deration of
the problems with which we are confronted.
I had hoped to have an opportunity to see you
last Thursday evening , and reg-ret th t I could
be at the U rban League dinner for such a. brief
period of time.
M r. Howl nd briefed me on your talk and stated
that it was an exc ellent presentation. T he next
time you are in Atlanta, I sincerely hope you will
give me a ring.
With b st wi hes, I
m
Sincerely,
Iv n Allen, Jr.
Mayor
lAJ r :ad
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�WILLIAM C. BARTHOLOMAY
Mr.· Bartholomay is Chairman of the Board of the
Milwaukee Braves, Inc.
Prior to this, he served as a Director of
the Chicago White Sox.
Mr. Bartholomay is also a Vice President
of Alexander & Alexander, Inc., an international brokerage firm.
He is a lif'e and qualifying member of the Million Dollar Round
Table of the National Association of Life Underwriters which is
the highest distinction offered in the life insurance industry.
Mr. Bartholomay is President of Surprise, Inc.,
which company operates retail toy stores in the Chicago area.
He
is also a Director of many companies and charitable institutions.
Mr. Bartholomay holds a Bachelor of Arts degree
from Lake Forest College and he also attended the Northwestern
University Graduate School of Business Administration.
�THOMAS A. REYNOLDS, JR.
Mr. Reynolds is Executive Vice President of the Milwaukee
Braves, Inc.
White Sox.
Prior to this, he served as a Director of the Chicago
He is also a partner in Winston, Strawn, Smith and
Patterson, a law fi:nn located in Chicago, Illinois.
Mr. Reynolds is a graduate of Georgetown University,
Washington, D.C.
He received his LL.B. in 1951 from the University
of Michigan Law School.
He is a member of Phi Delta Phi Fraternity.
He specializes in trial practice and corporate finance.
Mr. Reynolds has been Park Commissioner of Northfield,
Illinois, from 1959 until the present.
He is also a director of
many companies and participates in many functions for charity.
He is an excellent golfer.
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PRESIDENT ·. : .: , ·
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; ., .JOHN MCHALE
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John 'M~Hale·, to l)araphrase a.' .·certatn :presld~ntlal s'a ytng,· .ta.Ikd'
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sof'tly and' ·.swings
a· big
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f'ul bats of the .Mllwa:ukee ,Braves. ·· . A ·nattve of Detroit; he Jotned the :,.'
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. Braves . orga.nlzatlon .
25, 1959.
as
Vice President and . General Manager'
In September of 1961; he became President
of
on .January : : ,
the Milwaukee
club. ·
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Stnce hls high. school days, . J_ohn has rarely been far from a field
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at Notre Dame.
In...1-960-; he was a monogram winner at South Bend,
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playing center for the
11
Irlsh" on the football team.
World War II
. neccessltated movtng hts field to other areas, and he chose the Navy .
McHale could undoubtedly write a book about basebali --lf he could .
take that much
11
tlme out" from baseball.
Hls complete dedication to
the game dates back some 23 years• beglnnlng when he joined the Detroit ·
Tigers as a player 1n their sy-stem 1n 1941.
He played with the Club
1n the World Serles 1n 1945, and continued as a member . ot the team
throUgh 1948.
Tlgertown, 1n Lakeland, · Florida, owes lts origin to McHale'a
efforts when ·he became Farm Director ln 1953.
The Florida camp ls .
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the ' tralnlng ground for prospects'
,
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.Mrs • . McHale~ · the former l?atrlcta Cameron of . Detroit, and John
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are P':oducts: o_f thls · _s yste~~ - · Itnmeldately prlor _t~·;movlng
·· Detroit_-~·o,s ;_~ r
..•· to Mllwawcee
an:d ' most ot ~the players now
•
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. now ...realde in. Elm Grove, "Wlscons1n. · Their six sons and d~ughters,
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If
the proverbial throe wi::ihoo wore E;Te.."'lt o d h!m • ho'd p r ob~b ly d!_vld~ thom
between a.."'lothor pennant ~or the Bra.vos, c~pactty- crowd o ~or Mll w a uk oe
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CoWlty Stadium, and more, time to spend wlth his tnterestil\g -f amily.
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the Wlsconsln Club.
.An · articulate and · energetic guest-speaker, ·
he ~anages to fill most of the- dem_ands for personal appearances• .,. :- :
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but he hasn't been getting around to It much;
la.telyt 11
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Ootrolc , ~:tchtca.n , So;,toobc-r 15, 1921)
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�PEACHTREE
' 6 0 ' WEST PEAC' tTREE ST
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_AN-.-A 9
GA
December 16, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor:
If you haven't already seen it, you will get a
kick out of this newspaper article.
Best wishes for the holidays.
Cordially yours,
~
iot Heald
General Manager
WSB-TV
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Enclosure
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NINETEENTH
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• MILWAUKEE
RICHARD D . FOERSTE R
(i.,,oral Sale, Ma=9•r
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December 11, ·1964
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NORTH:
Mr. Don Elliot Heald
General Man_a ger
.WSB-TV
.1601 West Peachtree Street, NE
Atlanta 9, Georgia
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Dear Don:
Thanks much for the Atlanta· Braves bumper sticker. We
could use another 757 additional copies to place on
the city dump trucks. If you can comply, please mail
in care of this station and bill Alderman Grobschmidt.
'
Incidentally, Don, we are under the impression that the
name of the team has been changed to the Atlanta Carpetbaggers ••• so maybe you better put your typesetters to
work.
One final thought • • • to give you an idea of how happy
we are about the whole situatiqn, attached is a qui-p
from the Sports Edi tor of the MILWAUKEE JOURNAL, which
I think your · gang mi ght appreciate. As a matt er of f act,
I will fo rgive you if you and your associates just continue to wor k hard so that Cox Broadcasting stock goes
over 32-7/8 on the big board!
·
Best re gards.
Cordi a lly,
RDF/ v
Attach.
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8 11 OLIVER E. KUECH!..E, Sport• Edi:or .
Why Not a Festival Instead of Dinner? ·
ting SINCE the baseball writers' apnual dinrier· f~r fa·ns ·in ·Janhow I ,
uary r:i.ay be the . last here for some. time, it· might not
. '.~;~ a~1 o,e a ?ad 10~a to do_ s.omething special-even get' away from
iit _4oo. tne chnn er idea entirely and into something like a friendly
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the little· fos tival with "booths." The ,----~=--------=-1
n , too idea does have poss~bilities, and -25c a· fistful. But .only' one
,; · -:
if . the Braves \\·ould only co.. fistfµl a~ a time. -Jt \.Vouldn't
-; -.-. - . operate in a last gesture of fare- n_ecessar~ly have to be me, I · · well, _everybody would have a ~ gue, ~1ther. Custard w~1uld
C.. S good time. Atlanta mi <>ht even ~nythmg soft and flu1,y, ror
.
.
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this wouJd· be all in fun and in
seo<l_ ~p. Mayot Ivan _Allen , to the friendly spirit of the festi·
,. · . part,c1pa ,e.
val.
.
· ·
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th' A booth, · R,eynolds Rear,"
1k Bolling
ar O omay S a
would have fine possibilities. It ra
Qian _c:nd T HERE co u 1 d be a . water would be something like · the ..
. : _o f i the
dunking booth, foe instance, "pi'.1 the. ta!! , on . the _donkey" fi~
ednesday which · might be', co.lled "Bar- which blmd,o.ded . c h 1 Id re n mi
situation tholomav's Batli." Bill would play. Tom could ft)! the role_of ov,
·
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donkey. Three tails and pms
t season be perched on a chair above a -hat p·ns-c •Id b
Id f . t~E
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se effect tank of _ice cold water. with the 5oc.
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chair so 'triggered it would
.
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in Mil- d ump him into t he tank whenTroubadou~
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ever a small target was proper- .
in.
o~t this ly hit. Ice could be /dumped
LITILE: side attractio~s, go
right to into the wa ter periodically to be
Don Davidson, dressed like th.
,d. · " I'm sure the water was cold. Fans a troubadour and leading his po
' have a would pay 25c for three balls. two pooches which now answer ut(
1em out A fraternity paddling booth to the names of "Coca" 1and -;-:
te's a lot could be set up with a certain "Cola," could wa nd er through
bound t o d .
. d' F 25
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the c r o w d and occasionally
.yers but :~ui1~ 143.215.248.55 ~ne 0 lha~ke~~itli a~ ? reak into his skateless skatbascball. wooden paddle at' tl1e posterior rng ac_t.
e r s are of Mayor Allen of Atlanta. Ernie Johnson could imper·
··" · ters, yet "Ivan the Terrible" the booth senate Warren Giles and with
• take it could be called.
. ,
map and pointer explain how
s got to There could be a booth known the distance between Milwa uyself · al- as "McHale's Meringue." John kee and ~ inneapolis is really the fans would stick his head through a only 240 mik,s, not 345, and the .
1d InakeiI'lOie in a sheet of canvas .and distance between , Milwaukee
better." try t o duck fistfuls of meringue and Chicago is r e a 11 y only
80, not 95.
Earl Yerxa could pass out old
Braves programs _ free _ and
___!l\ _ A71ttJin _ ~ b.' ' when things got a little d ull 1
_ c;
Austin Brown could shoot off ,•
,
those t iny lady crackers. John
chool un- Mullen could sing "Hello, Dolly"
ime head wi th Bobby Br.a gan on the oboe.
Riverside Such a festival in nlace of a 'i
next 10 dinner WOUid serve several pur- C
i ms won poses. It would ra ise the money 'n
•nference to enable the baseball writers .
· In win- here to continue their scholar- F.
les, his sliip fund . .In fact, it might raise . c.
31 game enough money to let t11e writers
buy a college. It would give ff
baseball ians here an outlet for P;
·. f t their frustro.tions. And it would,
00 · as mentioned, allow the Chicago
t cafi'e owners to make a worth while
'.idwe~~ parting gesture t o the city they _
.
have
treated
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�LAW OFFICES
HATCHER.MEYERSON, OXFORD
HENRY M. HATCHER. JR.
AND
fRVIN
THIRD FLOOR, FIR.ST FEDERAL BUILDING
STAN LEY P. MEYER.5ON
40 MARI ETTA SfREET. N.\'((
CLIFFORD OXFORD
ATLANTA.GEORGIA 30303
' BENNY L.IRVIN
525 - 3404
PAUL E. PRESSLEY
ELLIS C. HOOPER
November 13, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor, City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I want to congratulate you on procuring the Milwaukee Braves
for 1966. The delay of one year should not be harmful, but actually
should enable us to get a better start in presenting a good front
during that season.
In view of the fact that Legion Field in Birmingham has now been
enlarged to 69,000 and has neither college football, professional
football, or baseball in it does indicate the great need for a major
stadium in a city of our size.
I think it is wonderful that you have
provided this leadership for an installation that never would have
been built under the administration of your predecessor.
I sincerely hope that the team will be successful in Atlanta and
that we will ultimately procure a Major League football franchise.
With kind regards, I am
yours,
Clifford Oxford
CO/bjm
cc:
Mr. Arthur Montgomery
�waga-tv
channel
10 18
CBS Television in Atlanta
5
November 16, 1964
W. PEACHTRE E ST.,N . W.
BO X 4 2 07
HORACE W. RAY.
GENE RAL M ANAG ER
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor o f Atlanta
Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
Thank you so much for inviting me to join you
last Thursday for the informal get-together
to meet the Braves officials.
As you know, we have been more than an enthusiastic booster to have the Braves come
to Atlanta. We are behind you and Arthur
Mont g omery, and y ou c a n count on our cont i nued
s o l id s up port.
Kind est personal r e gard s .
Cordia l ly ,
,L
Buddy Ray
BR: jv
... a service of the Storer Broadcasting Company
ATLANTA 2. GA .
TE L . 875 - 555 1
�287 SPRI NGDALE DR I VE , N.E.
ATLA NTA 5 . GEOR GIA
TEL. 2 33 -488 0 -
H . L . WILSON
Motion
Picture
No ve mber 10, 1964
Mayor Iva n Allen J r.,
City Hall
Atlant a - HOME OF THE BRAVE S
Dear Mr . Mayor:
More powe r to yo u , Arthur Mont gomery, Mill s B. La ne,
a nd all ot hers who had a hand in t h e bi g try.
More
power also t o the owne r s of the Br a ves for thei r own
brave stand .
I bel i e ve the y act e d i n good f aith.
Granted that I am sometimes gullible , but I hope I ' m
not naive .
Anyway I ' ll ride with this throw.
Hell, we only got knocked down -- not out.
Let's dust
off t he knees of our blue jeans and get back with it.
Okay , BRAVE men?
Yours for the iWorld
Series in
AS S I GNMENTS
ANYWH ERE
IN
THE
FREE
WO RLD
289 - 2162
Writer
�November 25, 1964
Mr . J. O . Moore
Atlanta Georgia Labor Council AFL-CIO
250 Tenth Street, N . E .
Atlanta , Georgia
De r Jim:
Thank you very much for your kind letter of November
18th concerning the move of :ma,jor league base ·11 to
Atlanta and the building of our new Stadium.
l am mo t rateful for your support and ppreci t
your kind expre ions. Working together e re going
to build a greater Atlant
nd that i
bat is important
to all of us .
Sincerely yours,
Iv All n, Jr.,
M yor
lAJr./br
�November 24, 1964
Mr . Cary B . Wilmer, Jr.
235 The Prado, N. E.
A tlanta 9, Georgia
Dear Cary:
Thank you very much for sending me the sports
column from the Tampa Tribune.
I hope you have had an opportunity to look at the
Stadium. as it is tl'uly a magnificent structure.
With best wishes, 1 am
Sincerely yours,
Ivan Allen, Jr.,
Mayor
IAJr/br
�November 25, 1964
• L . L . Jackson
1392 LaVista Road, N . E .
Atlanta, Geo-rgia 30324
Dear Mr. Jackson:
l appreciate your lett r of November 16th wbieh yo
wrote me while you were in Tifton, Georgia about
major league baseball coming to Atlanta.
I am mo t grateful for your kind rem.ar
nd hope
yo.u will have an opportunity to see many of the g
which will be played in our
ond~rful St dium.
Sincerely your ,
Ivan Allen, ,r.,
Mayor
LUr/br
e
�November Z5, 1964
Mr. Al Purc ell
53 Jefferson Street
Newnan, Georgia
Dear Mr. Purcell:
I certainly appreciate your nic e letter of November
16th about major league b seball coming to Atlanta.
We certainly have a magnificent Stadium and I ho
you will be ble to come up from Nunan often to e
the games.
With b st wi hes, I am
Sincer ly your ,
Ivan Allen, Jr .,
yor
lAJr:/br
�November 17., 1964
Mr . William C . Burnett
General Engineering Training Supervisor
Southez:n B-ell Telephone and Telegraph COlllpany
Hu.rt Building
Atlanta. GeoTgia 30303
Dear Mr . Burnett:
I certainly appreciate your very kind letter' of Nov..ember
13 and your strong support of the act.ton that has. been
taken to bring major league sports to Atlanta.
We h ve certainly not given up hope of having major
le gue ba eh.all in 1965 but. in any event,, for the first
time in Atl .ta' hi tory we will have them jor'
in 1966.
Ivan All n, Jr.
�NEW YORK WORLD TELEGRAM - November 5, 1964
�TELEPHONE 414 Di visi on 4-7000
2611 WEST WISCONSIN AVENUE • MILW~ U
MILWAU K EE , WISCONSIN, 53233
E X ECU TIVE OFFIGE
,
E.E,;
(_
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143.215.248.55
November 19 , 1964
Mrs . Ann Drummond
Administrati ve Ass i stant t o the Mayor
Ci ty Hall
At lant a, Georgia
Dear Ann:
I t certainly was pleasant talking with you yesterday and I was
hopeful that Bob Maercklein could be hel pful in some way . Bob
handles our advertising and publ ic r elati ons and is a good personal f r i end of mine. He comes from an old Milwaukee f ami l y of
high standing, and his uncle i s a former Governor of Wisconsin .
Frankl y, having lived here nine mont hs, I am convinced that t his
Brave s issue is one now of county polit ics and I feel there i s
l ittle hope of changi ng the county officials minds. They have
made such an i ssue of this wh ole Braves deal t hat they are afraid
that any concession t o Atl anta would assure t heir future pol itical
defeat . The attitude even among some business men is, make them
play here and refuse to support them .
I am afraid it would be unwise f or Atlant a to make any further
direct efforts to solicit assistance from the local officials.
The newspapers of course enjoy blowing the whol e thing out of
proportion .
Please give my best to Mayor Allen and if there is any change
in the situation or any new thoughts I will get in touch with
you.
LSF/cw
HILTON INNS IN ATLAN TA • AU RORA , ILL . • EL PASO • KANSAS CITY , MO . • MILWAUKEE
NEW ORLEANS • SAN FRANCISCO • SEATTLE • TARRYTOWN , N . Y .
�CHANNEL
WSB·TV
NEWS
RELEASE
An Official Editorial of WSB-TV,
THE HYPHENATED BRAVES
Atlanta, Georgia
November 9, 1964
The future of the Milwaukee Braves seems to be settled. They'll
play one more year in Milwaukee, then they'll move to Atlanta for
the 1 66 season.
Some local fans are understandably disappointed that there will be
no big league baseball here next year, and in case they're inclined
to go scapegoating we suggest they shy away from Mayor Allen.
The Mayor made some bright promises based on his confidence in Atlanta.
Allen said he could deliver big league baseball to our town, and he
was right. He was simply a year early due to unforeseen legal
complications. And if we hadn't built the stadium we wouldn't even
have a team for 1966 .
The attitude of Milwaukee officials seems curious. Of course, they're
unhappy about losing the Braves. But it's sort of like a man telling
his wife .... "In one year I'm going to divorce you and I've already
got your replacement picked out.
In the meantime, I e x pect you to be
I
the same sort of wife you ve always been ".
It just won I t work.
Milwaukee officials have delayed the inevitable one year, and it
profits them very little. Next year they ' ll have a hyphenated team
perhaps the sports writers will call them the Milwaukee dash Atlanta
Braves .
So n ow the political barrage against Mayo r Allen may begin . We ho pe
not . Atlanta has waited 70 yea r s for a majo r league team , and one
mo r e yea r i s n' t u nreasonable. Allen did eve ry thi ng in his powe r to
get t h e Braves fo r 1965 . A written contrac t to that e ff ect would
h a ve made no d i fferen c e. Th e Braves we r e obligated to pla y i n /
Milwaukee n e x t yea r. It was hoped that the team c o u ld s imp ly pay off
the r e nt o n Milwauk ee Co unt y S t a d ium a nd mo v e , but legal actio h
blo cked that.
I
So for one year Atlanta may have a vacant stadium. Fo r at least 25
years thereafter, Atlanta will have big league baseball .. • •••. that
leaves l i ttle room for c omplaint .
�November 16, 1964
Mr. Samuel L . Eplan
Attorney at Law
1017 William-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
De r Sam:
I appreciate your letter of November 10th regarding
the 1965 pl ying season at the stadium.
The uggestion you made is being pur ued, and I
certainly hope we will have full 1965 baseb 11
s ason.
Sincerely,
Ivan Allen, Jr.
IA.Jr . . bea
�MU . 8·8365
S AMUEL L. EPLA N
ATTORN EY AT LAW
1017 WILLIAM-OLIVER
BUILDING
ATLANTA, G E ORGIA 30303
November 10, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Mayor:
'!1here has been occasions in the past when big
league teams have played some of their games away from
their home grounds.
I wonder if it would be possible for each team
in the National League to agree to play four of its home
games in the Atlanta Stadium. Five would be better, but
I am using four for conveniency.
'!1hen, we could get sufficient public spirited
citizens to buy sufficient tickets to the games to
guarantee an attendance of not less than 30,000.
I am sure that a plan of this kind has crossed
your mind, but if it hasn't, it might be worth considering.
With kindest personal regards, I am
Sinc ~
urs,
Samuel L . Eplan
SLE/mgj
�November 16, 1964
Mr. Benard South
33Z Piedtnont Avenue, N. E.
Atlanta. Georgia
Dear Mr. South:
Thanks very much for your nice letter regarding the
Braves and our new Stadium.
I am certainly glad you share rny enthusiasm and
just hope that we will have baseball next spring.
With kind regards, I am
Sincerely,
Ivan Allen, Jr.
lAJr .. be
�I
BENARD
SouTH
1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
332 PIEDMONT AVENUE, N . E .
ATLANTA 12, GEORGIA,U . S . A.
PHONE JA4-2026
DISTRIBUTOR
BEARINGS & TRUCK EQUIPME N T
November 11th, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr .
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Ivan:
I want to congratul ate y ou on the c losing
of t he contr act to bring Major Leagu e Baseb all to Atlanta
to be played in the new stadium you have champ ione d all
t hese months . Yours has been a worthy t a sk and I am
c er t a in that history will prove this to b e one of the
fin e st steps forwar d that Atlanta has ever und er taken.
It n as been my pleasure to view ALL of the
l arges t stadiums i n America a nd quit e a few overseas .
One day I read a list of all t he l arges t stadiums in
America with the c apa city of each listed . I ha d been
in all of them fr om the Rose Bowl in Pa sadena to the
Yale Bowl i n New Haven a nd includ ing the Sesqui-Centennial
Stadium in Phila de l phia , Soldi ers Field a t Chi cago,
Orange Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Los Angeles Co liseum, Univ oof
California at Berkeley, California. I have witnessed
Maj or League Baseball games in 95% of all t he National
Leagu e and Amer i c an League baseba ll parks i nclu ding the
Milwaukee park a nd my exper ienc e le ads to· the conclus i on
that the good that will come to Atlant a in the building
of the new and modern stadium is incalculable.
I peddled Coca- Colas in Ponce de Leon park in
1919 and made the handsome sum of $J . 65 on the l as t day
of the season when the Cr ackers defeated New Orleans in
a battle for t h e pennant before some 13,000 fans. Most
of this profit c ame from selling Coca-Cola bottle crates
for the rightfield standees aft er we sold out of cold
drinks. I menti on these things t o indicate that I am
really not a novice when a discussion ar ises conc erning
the subject matter. I was present the day Arthur Montgomery
presen ted the Stadium plan to the Board of Aldermen when
the general public was invited. Mr.Montgomery made as
fine a presentation on a subject as I have ever heard.
The two of you have aone something f or Atlanta of which
you can well be proud!
Copies to: Mr.Arthur Montgomery
Judge James C.Davis, Atlanta Times
�It 1 s Quite a City - - - - WELCOME TO ATLANTA
If you are new to the Atlanta School System, please regard this as a
warm and cordial welcome not only to th.e Sys tern but to Atlanta itself.
Y-0u have joined one of the finest educational teams in the nation.
Your talents, efforts and creativity are needed to help make it the
best in the nation.
Perhaps you will not feel that we are immodest when we point out that
although Atlanta is twenty~fourth in the nation in population, it has
the fifth busiest airport, nineteen degree-granting colleges and
universities, several local theatre groups, a choral guild, a symphony
orchestra, music club, art museum, two ballet companies, and a concert
dance group.
Geographically, our city has the largest toll-free telephone system in
the nation. It has been called the City of Churches. We have 600
churches representing 40 denominations. Three commercial television
stations bring the three national TV networks to our city. The Atlanta
Board of Education owns WETV, the only educational television station
in the city. There are twenty commercial AM and FM radio stations in
metropolitan Atlanta and the Atlanta Buard of Education owns WABE, the
only educational radio station in the state. We have 159 parks and
recreational areas and in October when the freeway connector is completed in the center of town, you will be able to ride 40 miles south
and 40 miles north without encountering a stop sign.
Thirty thousand shops, stores and service organizations are within the
city limits for your convenience. ']:he city has more than 40 motion
picture theatres. There aTe 19 general hospitals and 10 special hospitals in metropolitan Atlanta.
Atlanta recently completed a twenty million dollar jet air terminal
that serves seven airlines with 465 planes arriving and departing
daily. And you may be interested to know that Atlanta is only two
hours by air from two-thirds of t he nation's population. A librar y
system, including a main library and 15 branches, will serve you.
Building goes a-pace on a new stadium and Atlanta expects in the very
near future to have a new auditorium. On the drawing board is the
Memorial Cultural Center that will enhance the cuitural life of metropolitan Atlanta and, indeed, the state. Also a six million dollar
area Vocational-Technical School will be under construction ar ound the
first of the year.
Atlanta ' s skyline is changing at a rapid rat e with the rise of new
skyscrapers. The latest on the drawing board is The First National
Bank which will be the tallest building in t he southeast. Measured
by pupil population, At lanta was the 16th largest school system in
the nation in 1963-64. Atlanta has 150 schools and over 7,000 children will enter kindergarten this year, Almost 110,000 school children
from kindergarten t4rough the twelfth grade will be enrolled in the
Atlanta School System in September. It takes approximately 40 million
dollars annually to operate the school system.
Re-printed from Atlanta Public Schools in F0CUS
(August
1964)
�11: 07 a.m.
R · ynolds & Lewis
M yor tom et
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ry
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llen
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�Nov . 11 , 1964
Te office of t h e Mayor of Atlan t a, Ga .
Mr . I van Allen ( I believ e)
Honorable Sir:
Several weeks a go I read a statement made by y ou or someone
in your offi ce.
I h a "i to read it t wice to believe i t, hm-t-
ever it went something l ike this:"One hundred years ago
t he city of Atl qnta , Ga . was level ed to t h e ground.
Today,
W§ 've built an $18,000,000.00 stadium on SOUTHERN SOIL wi th
SOUTHERN LABOR and with SOUTHERN MONEY. 11
I want · to know WHY
you don 't man it with a SOUTHERNBASEBALL
TEAM ?
With a ll tha t SOUTHERN Gab, I fe el sorry for the Milwau . ee
Braves.
I hope they d on ' t bring any NORTHERN money wi t h them .
Would it be negotiable?
I am not a n young punk" neither am I a n "old crank 11 and I
don 't
usually get p rovoked enough to write "opinion" letters
but t hat sil ly-., chil~ish remark coming from the off ices of the
Ci t y Fathers was too much- so I wish you SOUTHERJ.'J LUCK.
an X s outherner .
Mrs Norma Parl ier
2508 W. Carroll ~ve .
OAK CREEK, Wisc o
(Milwaukee suburb ) 53154
�- I
,
�November 9 , 1964
Mr. George F . Scarborou gh
3953 Green Oak Dri ve
Dora ville, Georgia
Dear Mr . Scarborough:
I certainly ppreciate your sending me a copy
of your letter to the Milwalkee County officials .
along with your nice note of November 9th.
I am delighted you share my enthusiasm. and I
hope we will have
signed con.tract for the people
of Atl nta nd Georgi within a very short time .
Sincerely,,
Iv n Allen, Jr .
M yor
IAJr: d
�3953 - yll.een. Oak. D1U...ve
Do;w,ville, yeo;u;_;,i..-a
Novembell. 9, 196ft.
/t1afJ,Oll. J um Allen.
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�THE FI R ST NATI O NAL BANK OF AT L ANTA
POST OF" F'I C E BOX 4148
ATLANTA 2 , GEORG I A
November 10, 1964
ARTHUR ANDERSON HUBER
ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor
City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
You have probably received many copies of the
enclosed article in Business Week. On the outside chance
that you did not, I thought you might be interested in
having a look at it.
We are all rooting for you. The news in the
paper yesterday morning was disheartening to all of us ,
yet I cannot help but feel that Milwaukee will realize
it has killed all chances for a profitable season next
year in that city, permitting the Br aves to be here as
promised, in the spring.
I would like to play a part in your endeavors ,
but you and Arthur seem to have the bases pretty well
covered.
With best regar ds , I am
your s ,
AAH: j j
Enc l osur e
�MILWAUKEE BRAVES, INO.
MILWAUKEE OOUNTY STADIUM:
MILWAu:in>:E , WISCONSIN
LOUIS R.PERJNI
Framingham, Mass.
December 28, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr .
Mayor
City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Mayor:
-I have received your most attractive
Christmas photographs of yourself and your staff
and also the pictures of the stadium under construction.
I appreciate very much your courtesy in
sending these to me.
With every good wish for you and your
family for the coming year, I am
c,c-e
y,
ouis R. Perini
LRP / cd
�LAW OFFICES
HURT, HILL , RICHARDSON AND SOSEBEE
WILLIAM-OLIVER BUILDING
CHARLES D . HURT
J A MES C, HILL
ROBERT R . RICHARDSON
HUGH D . SOSEBEE
ROBERT L. TODD
CHARLES D · HURT, JR.
ATLANTA , GEORGIA 30303
TELEPHONE
524~7946
Oc:to
r
21, 1 64
PERSONAL AND C NFIDENTI L
. Harold Sheats
Attorney at Law
Fulton F ol Buildin
Atlanta, G or la
. H nry L. Bowden
y at Law
Citlz ns & uth m atlonol Bo.nk Bid .
Attorn
Atlanta, G
r io
Id and H nry:
In II
nt co
I wlll
ca
In touch with you by
n. Ivan All n
thur
. Sidney
t
~nl'bftlroutih
on wh n I r turn from
ew Y
on riday .
�October 27, 1964
Mr. Walla.ce William Dreyfoos
Davison - Pax.on Campany
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Wally:
The present .from. Little Miss Davison is
prominently displayed on the wall of my
reception roam.
Not many thing nicer have happened than
your ingenious ad welcoming the Braves.
With appreciation for your continued uppor',
lam
Sincerely your ,
Ivan All n, Jx-.,
Mayor
lAJr/br
�THE SOUTHERN COMPANY
LENOX TOWERS
33QO PEACHTREE ROAD, N. E .
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
PLEASE REPLY TO :
P.O. BOX 18877
HARLLEE BRANCH,JR.
(ZONE 30326)
PRESIDENT
October 28, 1964
TELEGRAM
William C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milwaukee Braves, Inc.
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
15,000 emp}oyees of our system companies>
living in this dynamic southeastern region, were
pleased to learn of your intended move to Atlanta.
We hope the legal underbrush will be cleared away
without delay to permit a firm decision on your part.
This is big league territory in every respect, and
you are assured of a warm welcome.
Harllee Branch, J r.
Pr es i dent
The Souther n Company
cc:
Mayor Ivan Al len, Jr.
Mr. Op ie L. Shelton
HBjr: ebh.
Syst,.,m @ompanw,:
24/abama 'Fbwer Gompany • (}eorgia 'Fbw<Y" Gompany • (}ulf'Power Gompany • Mississippi'Fbwer Gompany
Sou.tl,.ern Electric (}eneratu,g Gompany • Sou.tl,.ern. Services, Inc.
-
L , . .. •
• •• • .
�Mayor :r.van Allen, Jr. and Arthur Montgomery, Chairman of the
Stadium Authority, invited me to visit Atlanta to look at the new municipal
stadium being built and to make a first-hand inspection of the growth and
expansion in this fine city and its supporting region.
The Stadiu...,n Authority has given me a firm contract for consideration
of the Braves. I a:;:n taking this back to Chicago as part of the evaluation I
am making regarding the Braves' future.
The Braves :-ecognize the responsibility and public trust involved in
even considering the moving of a professional sports franchise from one area
to another e However, since ba_s eball is truly a national sport, we can no longer
ignore the vast areas of this country which do not currently enjoy our great
game.
I want to compliment the people of Atlanta, Mayor Allen, Arthur
Mont gomery, the Stadium Authority and the other elected officials for their
fores ight in c r eating the facilities and atmosphere for the inevitable
introducti on of major league sports to the southeastern ar ea of the United.
S t ates.
STATEMENT BY WILLIAM C . BAR THOLOMA Y
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRAVES
-October 14, 1964
�Mayor Ivan Allen, Jro and Arthur Montgomery, Chairman of the
Stadium Authority, invited m.e to visit Atlanta to look at the new municipal
stadium being built and to make a first-hand inspection of the growth and
expansion in this fine city and its supporting region.
The Stadiu-:n Authority has given me a firm contract for consideration
of the Braves.
I am taking this back to Chicago as part of the evaluation I
am making regarding the Braves I future.
The Braves :-ecogni ze the responsibility and public trust involved in
even cons idering the moving of a professional sports franchise from one area
to another e However , since baseball is truly a national sport, we can no longer
ignore the vast areas of this country which do not currently enjoy our g reat
gam e .
I wa nt to compliment the people of Atlanta, Mayor Alle n, A r t hur
. M ontg omery , th e Stadi um Authority and the othe r electe d offi cials fo r their
foresight in creating t h e fa ciliti es and a tmo s pher e fo r t h e inevit a ble
introduction of m a j or leagu e sports to t h e south e a s te rn area of t he United
S tates.
STA TEM E N T BY WILLIAM C . BART HOL OMAY
C HAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRA VES
October 14, 1964
�Octob.er 16. 1964
Mr. Sid Sc rborough
City of Atlanta .. Fulton County
Recreational Authority
5th Floor • 70 F irlie Street. N . W.
Atlant • Georg·
Dear Sid:
1 am
in alo
letter hich I
re.comm.ending Scotty S nford .
ration y
Sincer l: your ,
All u..
yor
lA:sr/ r
CC:
E ncl
Mrs. Matie Kendrick
Ul'e
Jr.,
recei
�DRAFT A RESOLUTION
By: Alderman Buddy (/, Fowlkes
Whereas, the Board of Aldermen created the City of Atlanta-
~~ ~ .
(j'J
Fulton County'-Stadit.tHl. Authority to hous w
rofessional baseball team, and
Whereas, this stadium will be completed in the Spring of 1965; and
Whereas, a firm contract has been presented to the Milwalke Braves
to move to Atlanta and capture the great southeastern sport<{ans; and
-r ,/
Whereas, th~ City will enthusiastically support the team to the
fullest ext en-{
We, therefore, the undersigned encourage the owners of the
Milwalkee Braves to accept the
offer to move to Atlanta, and we
pledge our spport in making your new home base prosperous , pleasant
and happy .
W e f urth e r resol v e that
a copy of this
do ~ , with the s e a!
of the c i ty clerk be forward e d to Mr . William C . Bartholomay , Chair man
of the Boa r d of the Milkwalkee Brav es.
�Octobe r 28, 1964
Mr. C. C. Williams
2980 Delmar Lane , N . W .
Apartment E.2.
Atlanta, Georgia
30311
Dear Mr. Williams:
As Mr·. Allen is out of the city, I would like -to
acknowledge receipt of your letter of October
27th.
We appreciate your interest in telling Mr. Aaron
and Mr. Maye about Atl nta. Thi is to advi e
that all ne-ces ry information which you mentioned
has already been furni hed to the owner of the
Milwaukee Braves by Mr . Allen.
Sincerely your ,
Ann Dzummond,
E1tecutive Se,c.re
AD/br
ry
�2980 Delmar Lane, N. w.
Rpartment E-2
Atlanta, Georgia 30311
October 27, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of the City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia
My dear Mr. Mayor:
Congratulations to you on the concerted efforts you have put forth
in securing a Maj or League Baseball Team for Atlanta.
Knowing that you have received numerous congratulatory expressions
on this subject, it is my desire to extend warm, personal feelings because of certain factors involved.
As a classmate and personal friend of Mr. Henry Aaron, I talked
with him in person via telephone on October 23, 1964. During our conversation, he asked for a personal opinion concerning the r acial issues
in Atlanta. Having weighed the issues carefully , I informed Mr. Aaron
that I would collect a city survey from proper authorities.
In the meantime , I asked him to talk with Mr. Maye and at a convenient time, arranged by them, I would bring the results of the poll
ta.ken to Wisconsin.
This type of survey, I felt would give an opportunity to discuss
each phase of the city from many angl es as well as from several individual
points of view. Mr. Aaron, I am pleased to say, readily accepted m:y proposal.
In regards to the information concerning the survey, I would like to
discuss the matter with you personally i f such a conference can be arranged.
I would also like to secure materials, brochures, and other available
information pertinent to the matter of race relations in Atlanta.
I will be very grateful to l-tOU if you will give this matter your
serious consideration at a very early date so that I may be able to talk
with Mr. Maye and Mr . Aaron.
�The Honorable Ivan Allen - Page 2
There is also a possibility of Mrs. Aaron becoming interested in residing
in Atlanta.
Positive reactions from you, as well as favorable comments from other
prominent citizens, I feel, certainly will be important factors in determing
the future home of a family; especially when that family is connected with a
team that will be an asset to our city.
I hope to hear from y ou soon.
Very truly yours,
c. C. Williams
�October 2 6, 1964
Mr. Joe B . Bute.bison
61? Fulton National Bank Building
Atlanta 3, Georgia
De r Joe:
I certainly appreciate your taking the time to· end
me the article f~arn the Dallas Times Herald abaut
the .e xciting sports news in Atlanta.
We are eagerly antic:ipati.1'g die Bra
Atlan:ta.
c:oming to
Sincerely yours,
Ivan Allen. 3r.
lAJr/br
�JOE
B.
H UTCHISON
012 FULTON NATIONAL BANK BUILDING
ATLANTA 3 , GEORGIA
October 23, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor, City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I thought you would be very interested in th
attached article from the Dallas Times-Her d.
It is wonderful publicity for Atlanta,
a I
t hink it is a fine compliment to you and the
job you are doing.
Si ncere ly ,
B. Hutchison
j s
Enclosure
�Spon:,"brt!d b\ the Sports Dpartment of
11 O
Atlanta I 4,
Leathers Circle, Northwest
Geqrgi,;
October 19, 1964
AL . THOMPSO N
President
MARION E. JACKSON. SR
Coo r<linntor
THELBA M. BROWN
Secr e tary
JOSEPH JACOBS
Financial Secr etary
T. J . CRITTENDEN
Trea~urcr
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of Atlanta
Atlanta , Georgia
J. R. SIMMONS
Stat iALicirw
Ey dear Eayor Allen :
JOEL W . SMITH
llUtoriographer
A\\10.rd, And Rating l 'ornmi tl<'C'
RALPH C. ROBINSON,
Chairman
JOEL W. SMITH
MARION E. JACKSON . SR.
WILLIAM M. NIX
The attached copy of our telegra:n to Mr . Bartholomay
is being sent for your infor'Tlation and files . In a
meetine yesterday, we also asked our rembers t.o send
individual teleBran,s.
With best. wishes .
Sincerely yours ,
lnnual Au:arda Danqul't Committ,•r
J. R. SIMMONS
Chairman
WILLIAM A. SCOTT . Ill
A . T. HOLLINGSWORTH
EMEL J. SCOTT
BLANCHARD M . COO KE
A. L. Thompson
President
JJrogram And A.ctiC"itic, Cummittc~
JAMES
H.
WILLIAMS,
~nclosure
(,/ioirmnu
JACK ADAM5
DR. HARVEY 8 . SMITH
Du.rf.r::,t•t Anti .Ucm.bcr ,hip (;ommitt£'r
DR. CHARLES F . GOOSBY.
Chairman
T.
J. CRITTENDEN
DR. ROBERT H. JORDAN
Re :r·arch Committt·r.
DR. WILLIAM B
SHROPSHIRE.
£.1wirmur,
JOSEPH JACOBS
HORACE A. BOHANNON
Public Relation Nepresent.1t.i1 •'
The Mos·; H. Ken.frv. 01ga11b1tzon,
IJ'a~hington. V. C.
�T E L E GR AM
October
16, 1964
MR. WTILIAM C. BARTHOLOYJAY
CHAIRYJAN OF BOARD - MILWAUKEE BRAVES
2 NORTH RIVERSIDE PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
THE 100% 'WRONG CLUB. A1~ ATLANTA SPORTS GOOUP OF NATIONAL RSPUTATION
A~ID I NFLUENCE, JOINS THOUSAJ~ DS OF RAGER BASEBALL FANS TO ASSURE THE
BRAVES OF DEDICATED SUPPORT I N TI-ITS SOUTHEASTERN AREA ,
WHEN 'IBI S FINE
BALL CLUB COMES TO OCCUPY ATLANTA I S MULTI- MILLION DOLLAR STADIIB1 .
WE LOOK FORWARD WITH GRF'...AT ENTHUSIASM TO EN,JOYING THE RENE::CITS OF THI S
MUTUALLY ADVANTAGEOUS ASSOCIATION OF A GREAT CITY AND A GREAT ORGANIZATI ON.
A. L. THOMPSON
PRlmIDENT
l OO i '\:J!lONG CLUB
11 0 Leathers Circle, N. W.
A tJ.an ta
, Ga .
SY. h- l '.l74
,.
�DIRECTORS
OFFICERS
ARTH UR BURDETT. JR.
FRANK CART ER
MCIVER EVANS
EMERSON HOLLEM AN
CONE M . MADDOX. J R.
H ARR Y NORMAN. J R.
WM. S . SIMMS
J AM ES L. S T A RNES
A . H . STURGESS
SAMUEL M. WEYMAN
STEWART W IGHT
WARD WIG HT. JR.
THOMAS V . CA UBLE. PRESIDENT
J . MARION CRAIN . VICE P RESIDENT
C . D . LEBEY. JR .. VICE PRESIDENT
JACK D . M . MORSE. VICE PRESIDENT
HENRY C . BALDWIN. TREASURER
NOEL C . T URNER. SECRETARY
MRS. T OMMIE JACKS ON. E XECUTIVE SECRETARY
HEALEY
BUILDING
Cctob r 19, 1964
N I GHT LETTER
Mr . V:m . C. B rtholomay, Ch&it'rnan o f t he Board
Milwaukee Brave , Inc .
2 N. Riverside Plaza
Chicago, ILLu~ IS
RF.PRES · NTING THE O FIC .. RS O
( .ABD VE URGENTLY REOUF.ST T
BRAVES 1 0 A 'l
0
0
NTA AND TO CUR
T
ATLANTA .. ,LAL EST TE
ING THE MIL ,.AU?
. STADIUM. AT A REC :NT
ORGIA RFALTOPS ASSOCIATION MEETING lN ATLANTA A NUM
C LUM US GFO'.RGIA REALTOR
SS 'D THIS
A
.. R.
E INTER ST .
Henry C. Baldwin, Chahman
Civic > ffai:re Committee
Atlanta Real
etate Board
�October 19, 1964
Mr. Willi m C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milw ukee Braves, Inc.
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
Dear Mr.
artholomay:
For the good of Atl nt, as well s for the
_ood of th Brave I I most ince:r ly and heartily
r is my voice in the c:reseending chorus which t.rill
reach you inviting them to make th ir hon:ae here.
Wh
that h ppy d y rrive I all e citiz
of Atlanta can w r Dartmouth coll g ties ! Th~ rru>ol
for th
chool,
you
y know, i an Indi n H d.
-...
c. ., .
Pi-
1d
1m
t
CrP:r
bee:
bee :
Mr. Op i e: L. Shelton
Honorable I van Allen, Jr., Mayor
/
�A RESOLUTION
BY DOUGLAS L .
OWLKES
WHEREAS, the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the City
of Atlanta were instrumental in the creation of the City of
Atl anta - Fulton County Recreational Authority to construct and
manage
stadium in the City of Atlanta
bo
house
profession 1
baseball t eam, and
WHEREAS , this stadi um will b . completed in the
Spring of 1965; and
WHEREAS ,
firm contract h s been presented t o the
management of t he Mil waukee Braves t o move to Atlant a and occupy
this modern stadium and t o c pture t he sports f ans of th
s outh-
eastern area , and
WHEREAS , t he r sidents and offici l s of the City of
Atlant a will enthusi atic lly
upport this team t o the f ullest
extent ;
NOW, THEREFORE , BE l T RESOLVED by th
of Al d rmen of the City of At l nt
of the Mil w uk
Brav s to
nd to occupy our great new
kin
tb1
n
Be
of Al
by
ho
it furth r r
tadtum nd w pl dg
t o Atlant
our support i n
sant and h ppy .
olv d th teach
ndorse
the owner
thi
r
emb r of th
olutto and so
o rd
i nifte•
his si nature b reto .
e it furth r r
el o
th l
ncour
cc pt t his offer to mov
prosp r ous, pl
rmen individually
ffixin
th t they
yor and Bo rd
y, C ai
1
that
the C ty Clerk
l!'
orw r
y of this r solutio
t
Willi
f th Milw k
c.
•
�I ii|ii
i%
i' 'J
1='
av'.'
viwfhJ
>}l
"i
iH 'M
¥;pA«'W"'r.VV, ,
Jrif
'
I
' i\ 'Mij Ujj5>l,
t»,!
�BY DOUGLAS L ..
WLKES
s,
WK
of Atl nta
Atl nt
th
Mayor and Bo rd of Ald rmen of the City
nt l in th er
ere int:
- P\J.lton County Recr
nage
Sprin
tl nt
to hous
th
City of
nd
to con1ttTUct
prof
icmal
nd
•
WHEREAS, thi
of 1965,
t dium
co l t d in th
111
d
fi
c ntr ct hae b :n pr s nt
nd to captur
mo ra
tbla
tlon 1 Authorit
t«dium in th City of
11 t
tion o
th . ports
to th
n of the
outb-
ust ra are,
,o fficf.Al
Atl
tit
will
thu.slasti
t
City of
to the full
t;
~t
, B
I
f Alde
of
lly eupport thl
of th
OLVBD by t
City of Atl&nt• th t tb y
ra ••to• c
•
•
t thl•
•ta 1
t
1,
k
IT
roue,
a
la
ff
f Al
i•.
•
rs
Atla
i
w
t •
. rd
t •
•
al
•
•
b
1
l
t'
D
th
r
1• r • lu i
,.
our
t •
lt
af
Mayor
f
ia
1 t1
11
•
1••
��-
·- A
··
OLUTlO
BY t>OOGLAS L. FOWLKES
WHEREAS, tb
of Atlan
Atlant
r
- Fulton County
tadi
b aeball t
tion 1 Authority t
in th City of Atl nt
construct .aa
to bou
a prof
l
int
ional
n
•
thi
WH
t dium
ill
e
Sprin of 1965, ao~
WHEllEAS. a firm contr ct h
t of th
thi mod m atadi
aat rn ar
'
Mil• uk
a1'd to
n pr: ant
B v . a to mov to Atl
pture the port
ta an occupy
of th south·
f
n
co th fullest
tl nt will enthual stic 11 support tbia t
xt
to th
t;
OLVBD y tb
•
r
rd
own r
of the
t
t
cc t thl
t new at di
•
ha
1
a.6 A1
•
Atl nee
7•
thet" re, lva ta eac
fa
a
t
i i
�A
OLUnON
BY DOUGLAS L. FOWLKES
yor nd oard of Ald rmen of the City
'WHEREAS, th
er ation of th City of
of Atl nta wer iii tru:
Atl nt
- Fulton County R er
ge
b
e
tionl Authority to con truct
City of Atl nta to house
tadium in th
prof
nd
ion l
, and
11 te
WHEREAS, thi
tadium ill be completed in th
Spring of 1965, and
WHEREAS,
firm contr ct h
nag ment of th Milwaukee Brav
thi
modem a
t
dium nd to c ptur
b n present
to mov
the
to
to th
tlant4 and occupy
ports f na of th
south-
rn r
Atl nta
residents and offici 1 of th
s, th
WH
nthu i stic lly
11
upport this tam to th
City of
full
t
extent;
w,
of Alde
oard
n of th City of Atlanta that thy encoura e the own r
of th Milw u
to
n too cup our r
ki
SOLVED by the Mayor nd
, BE IT
thi n
n
t
and w pl d • our •upport i
le ant an
urth r -reeolv c1 that ach
ol Al
lly.
bi
•
reaolN
i
r o th• or
t 1• r .aoluti
t .
Cl
l of the
•
or•
•
~
•
st i
• b r to.
t
it furt •
•
to Atl · ta
t this off r to
bo
• it
7 etfixi
c
f
t
0
of
7
f thia
111
•
lu i
c.
·"··
1••
��WASHINGTON OFFICE
AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION
Direclor
Donald E. Channell
Assistant Director
1120 Connecticut Avenue, N. W . , Washington, D.C . 20036 Tel. (202) 337-8266
Lowe I I R. Beck
Assislonl lo the Director
H. Michael Spence
October 29, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor
City of Atlanta
Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I regret that I did not have an opportunity to see you while
in Atlanta. I did s ee a great deal of you in the newspapers
and on Television regarding the Braves.
I was greatly impressed with the progres s that has b een
made in y our wond e rful city and I hope to r e turn soon and get
togeth er with you.
Sincerely,
�30 Cambridge Road
Madison 4, Wis.
October 25, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
City Hall
Atlant a, Ga.
Dear Sir:
As more and more facts come into print relating the surreptitious dealings
between you and the present owners of the Milwaukee baseball franchise, I
become i ncreasingly impressed by the complet e disregard shown by both parties
for t he people a nd city of Milwaukee.
You, as mayor of Atlanta and principle
negotiator with the "fast Buck" owners of the franchis e, sought to i gnore an
exi sti ng contract between those owners and the county of Milwaukee as well as
the f ine support given the clup by Milwaukee fans .
I am sure you would not
want others to deal i rresponsibly in a f fairs relating to y our c ity, were the
situation reversed .
Certainly a mayor should act in an ethical manner not
only in his city, but beyond his ci t y and state.
Ati anta ' s desire for major
league baseball is no excuse to do otherwise .
A more honorable course would have been t o work for league expansion through
the league office.
In my opinion by failing to do thi s your a ctions have been
detrimental to both baseball and Milwaukeeo
I believe you owe both an apology.
B~,lkSydney Miller, M.Do
r
�r
--,
9700 W. Grantosa Drive
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53222
October 26, 1964
Ivan Allen, Jr. , "Mayor"
11 City of Atlanta"
Atlanta, Georgia
Seems to us we have been reading in the press these days
about a shift of a major league franchise better known as the
"Braves" to a "city" called Atlanta. Somewhere in our geography
lessons we learned that this was a city down in a state called
Georgia, the land of peaches and peanuts.
Well, at any rate, we've been reading a few quotes of yours
in our papers here, and to say that we have been amused beyond
description is putting it mildly. To refresh your memory, here are
a few.
"Today we welcome the opportunity to become a symbol of
southern zest and drive, a major league city, a major league
state, and a major league region." Man, this Atlanta must be
qui te a place! After all the shenanigans which have gone on between Atlanta and these young owners of the Braves and the methods
used to effect the transfer of the franchise to Atlanta, about the
best we can say is that the whole business is strictly bush-league.
As for the above quote, up here in Milwaukee we call it BALONEY!
And quite a mouthful at thatl Careful now, don't choke.
Another quote. "I don't think anything has been handled more
properly and more above board. It is recognized that when a city
loses attraction for the club, it moves out." Come now, Ivan , you
don't really believe that do you? You couldn't! Don't you know that
from 1903 to 1953 there wer e no shifts in fr anchises until the big
money boy from Boston moved his club to Milwaukee in '53? And really,
there is no comparison with that move to the present luring of the
Braves to Atlanta.
·
During these years the minor leagues flourished to a reasonable
degree, but once fellows like Stoneham, whose attendance in San
Francisco this past season was nothing to shout about, and O'Malley
whose Dodgers collapsed this year, and Charlie Finley, whose A's
found it easy to land in the cellar, when these fellows decided to
head out in other directions, then came the gradual decline of the
minor leagues. If that last statement of the above quote is true,
then baseball can start screaming, "Look out below!" It's on the
way down and out now.
Another quote . In congratulating Atlantans for their courage
in building an 18 million dollar stadium you have been quoted as
saying, "They represent the new, dynamic south which is no longer
willing to be side-lined on the back benches." Wow, are those
vote-getting words. You ought to be a sure-fire winner in the next
election with statements like that. Yes, sir, Ivan, I'll bet they
really love you down Atlanta way these days.
�To continue. "Our stadium is a southern project, built on
southern soil (No kidding), with southern money, by southern
occupants and contractors. We feel it is uniquely fitting that this
decision has been made which marks almost exactly the centennial
of the day when Atlanta was left an ask-strewn ruin, symbol of a
region 1.s defeat." Isn't that tender! It almost drives one to tears.
How does it happen that Lou Perini isn't building your new
ballyard? Of course, he needs the money like a moose needs a hat-rack,
but after all, isn't Louis one of the owners of your new club? But
that wouldn't look good, would it? There are a few things we have to
keep on the level, aren't there?
And those words about "the centennial of the day when Atlanta
was left an ash-strewn ruin, symbol of a mm:Ib:mmm region's defeat."
Those words could prove to be providential. You could get the same
shoddy treatment from these young owners that we received, and after
they have "bled" you for all they can, they're just apt to dicker
under the table a year in advance with some other unsuspecting city.
Then you too will have a defunct ball pasture like we'll have. We're
planning on bringing back donkey baseball. What'll you havei
Back in 19)9 when John Quinn, now General Manager for the
Phillies, saw the light and left the Braves, the Braves brought in
a guy by the name of John McHale as Ueneral Manager. At that time a
respected and influential citizen of Detroit supposedly said, "The
greatest day in Detroit baseball dawned when McHale left Detroit and
went to Milwaukee." Well, fr om that day on the fortunes of the Braves
were never in sorrier hands. Now Johnny boy is leaving Milwaukee.
Hallelujah! And with him will go a couple of little boys from our
ne ighbor ing s tate to the south. Good riddance! I n our l ast will and
tes tament we bequeath them to you, with the hope that you won't be
11 takenr• l ike we were. So be careful and insist on a contract fo r
at
lea st thir teen years so that you can at least pay for your new
stadium.
We under stand you also made a pitch for the St. Louis Cardinal s
of t he Nati onal Football League , but weren't successful. Must be t he
Bidwell boy s II smelled a r at and wi s ely snubbed you. We understand you
had a tremendous crowd for an exhi biti on game the ~ardinals played
t here , and a wor se crowd when two t eams of the Amer ican Football
League played a game there . Where were all thos e Atlantans who, as
you supposedl y said "represent the dynami c s out h?"
And finally , don 't for get that chubby little rascal Warren Giles,
the so-called President of t he National League. What a boy! With
all the hot air he t hrows aroundm he reminds us of a cent ral heating
plant . In him , Ford Frick , and Joe Cronin baseball has the highest
type of poor leadership. When bas eball es t ablishes its "Hall of IllFame", we can tell you who will head the list.
With everlasting sympath~ to the players on the club, we remain
Very sincerely yours,
Former Braves Fans
�DEMET ta DEMET
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS
324 EAST WISCONSIN AVENUE
MILWAUKEE 2, WISCONSIN
FRANCIS J. DEMET
BROADWAY 3-7390
MAIi.CADETTE M.DEMET
October 28, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of Atlanta
,City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Re:
Milwaukee Braves, Inc., a Delaware Corporation
Sir:
You are hereby placed o n n otice t ~hat the undersigned,
as a minority stockholder, has commenced an action in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wis consin in Case No. 64 -C-305, praying f or a permanent injunction
restraining the Mi lwaukee Braves from moving to Atlanta , Georgia,
in violation o f its enforc eable contract with Milwauke e County.
You are further put on notice and, advised that the
enforceable contract referred to ab ove is b inding between the
Milwaukee Braves and Milwaukee County until December 31, 1965.
The contract provides for the ren tal by the Milwaukee raves
from Milwaukee_County of Milwaukee County Stadium for purposes
of playing national l eague baseba ll home games by the Milwaukee
Braves for the 1965 season.
You are hereby placed o n notice that any further efforts,
on your part or on the part o f your various governmental units
and others acting in concert with you to breach and aid in the
breach of the contract referred to above , will expose you and each
of y~u to the consideration of further stockholder legal action.
FJD:alv
cc:
cc:
Milwaukee Journal
Milwaukee Sentinel
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�COME TO WHERE THE SIX EYES MEET •.• SO THAT WE MAY
SAY THE BRAVES WON'S' SUFFER DEFEAT.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
BRAVE THE WAY AND COME TODAY . THE PEOPLE ARE WANTING
SEASONAL TICKETS ••• AND THE CONTRACTOR SAYS THERE WILL
BE A GREAT DAY NEXT MAY .
. . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
COME THIS WAY BRAVES AND SAVE THE DAY •••• THE MAYOR AND
THE BLDERMEN ARE RUNNING AND THE CONTRACTOR ' S MAKING
HAY •••• FOR THE DAY NEXT RAY .
�C TY
OF ATLANTA
OFFICE OF
MUNIC IPA L REV ENUE COLLECTOR
E X-OFFICIO MARSHAL AND TREASURER
Atlanta 3, Georgia
October 15, 1964
CHARLES L . MATH E W S
MUN ICIPAL REVENU E CO LLE C TOR
Gentlemen::
Atlanta i s t he greatest sports city in the entire
Southeast and a Major League baseball team would be
another great asset to this wonderful city.
I am quite sure that the people of Atlanta will
support a team like the Milwaukee Braves, and I will
personally give them all the support I possibly can.
MEMBER MUNICIPAL FINANCE OFFICERS ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STA TES AN D CANADA
�L '2A: (Q U
E
C . G.~L l US
M~
. l ...
~ I\ {l\.a.. S
�Telegram to the BRAVES
The Braves' fans will have a new freeway system of six (6)
Interstate Highways plus a new major thoroughfare system to
bring them to see all home games in the new Atlanta Stadium.
We welcome you to Atlantao
Karl A. Bevins
City Traffic Engineer
�October 16 , 1964
'Tele gram
According to news reports, there is a possibility that the
Braves mi ght move to Atlanta. This is wonderful news as a
dynamic team such as the Braves could not find a cit y as
dynamic and sports-minded as Atlanta. I hereby make a strong
p ersonal pl ea ur ging the Braves move to Atlanta.
Paul B. Ivey
~ 8-1:-:
@:U3-e-v-a-Pe
Urive
At)"an '(., a. -Ge-er-g4 a
I «"f d
C / 7?/
/j
of
~ y1 r/
~
•E •
3 0 3-l 7
·-
,17h-v~.
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT OF CITY HALL
ATLANTA
3,
G EORGIA
October 15, 1964
J. HOWARD MONROE
Superintendent
Telegram to:
Milwaukee Braves
Milwaukee, Wis.
Come on Braves.
Come to Atlanta where
progress is a habit and our people wait
with open arms.
~~n~
City Hall Superintendent
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�CITY OF ATLANTA
PERSO NN E L B O A RD
C ITY HA LL
Atlanta, Georg ia
30303
CAR L T . SUTHERLAND
Di r e ctor
Not only Atlanta baseball fans but also
those from throughout the entire Southeast are anx ious
to have a major league baseball team in our own section
that we can support.
We trust that the Milwaukee Braves
will be that team .
CARL T . SUTHERLAND
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�Iy
opi nion is
hat no city in the country would support
the Braves like Atlanta.
Come on down, we nee d
Ernest J. Brewer
Purchasi ng Ag nt
City of At l ant a
ou.
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT of CONSTRUCTION
301 CITY HALL
Atlanta 3, Georgia
October 16, 1964
RAY A. NI X ON
Chief of Construction
M . B. NIXON
Asst. Chief of Construction
Mr. William C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milwaukee Braves
~2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
Dear Mr. Bartholomay:
Bring the Braves down to Atlanta next year and lets
make it three series in a row for the National League .
Sincerely,
RAN:ck
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�Mr. Landers;
The following members of the Board of Aldermen when contacted by us
requested that we compose an appropriate telegram for their signature:
/ . . Gregory Griggs
JJ.
M. Flanigen
/4harlie Leftwich
~ ohn A.
White
Ben Moore
Jack Summers
~~c2c1~
/:~~
~;,u_:/!~
QJJ~
clcJ / j ~
�DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICITY
DEWEY
L.
JOHNSON
SUPERINTENDENT ELECTRICAL AFFAIRS
October
16, 1964
Mr. Wil li am C. Bartholomay
Board Cha i rman Mi hraukee Braves
Nationa l League
We of the Electrical Div is i on of the City of
Atlanta and a l l of the e l ectr i cal workers of
this area are very anxious for y ou to br ing
y our Brave s of the Nat i onal League to our
city. We offer our full cooperation and believe
that you wi ll be successful here.
Yours very truly ,
ELECTRIC A.L DIVISION
E. F. Wise ,
Chief Electrical Inspector
ATLANTA
T~E
DOGWOO D
CITY
�a great
inc mmunity 7rov
sports sta ·
'f'·
the
2,400,000 potential major
,J}I
league baseball fans)within two hours driving time of our new stadium,
anxiously await the announcement of the Bravesi move to Atlanta - the
Capitol of the Southeast.
~
in ou
Wyont B. Bean
Planning Engineer
City of Atlanta
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT
OF
BUILDINGS
PLUMBING DIVISION
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303
JAMES H. SCHOFIELD, SR., P.E . , A.S.S.E.
WILLIA M R. WOFFORD, P . E., R . A.
CH IEF PLUMB I NG I NSP E C T OR
I NS P EC T OR OF B U IL D I N GS
EL MER H. MOON , E . E., P.E.
WY L IE W. MITCHELL , A.S. S.E.
A S S T. I NS PECT OR OF B UILDI N G S
ASS T. CH IEF P L UMB I N G IN SPEC T O R
October 16 , 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen , Jr .
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
We have twelve employees in the Plumbing Division, and
we are unanimously in accord with your wishes for Major
League Baseball in the City of Atlanta .
We sincerely believe that you are capable of securing
this franchise from Milwaukee, as well as a Professional
Football Team in the very near future .
Many wishes for the continued success of your administration.
Yours very truly,
!Ill//~
W.W. Mitchell, Assistant
Chief Plumbing Inspector
WWM/gs
AT L ANT A
Tl-I E DOGWO O D C I TY
��A RESOLUTION
BY DOUGLAS L . FOWLKES
l·fflEREAS, the Mayot: and Board of Aldermen of the City
of Atl nta were in trument 1 in the er ation of the City of
Atl nta - Fulton County Recreation 1 Authority to con truct and
nage
stadium in th
City of Atlanta to house
prof
ion 1
bas ball te m, and
WHEREAS, thi
s adium will be completed in the
Spring of 1965, and
firm contri ct b s b en pr sent
WHEREAS,
management of the Milwauk
thi
Br ves to mov
modern st dium nd to captur
t m
th
· to the
to Atlanta
nd occupy
f ns of th
port
south-
rea, and
r
WHEREAS, th
Atlanta will enthu 1
identa and offici 1
tit lly support thi
t
of the City of
m to th
full
t
xtent;
, BE IT RESOLVED by the
l«>W, THEREJ'O
n of th
of Ald
of th
Mil
u
City of Atl nt
Br v
to ace
thie n who
.o f Alde
ividually en or
his ai
ture
t
l
t
y,
f
th
own r
to Atlanta
off r to
h
that
pl dg
our support in
o r
f t
a
ao
nifi •
r to.
t
Ci 1 Cl
0
ch met111>er
a thi• r soluti
r
it f rth
Uft<1U
thi
oard
, ro p r u , pl . s nt and h p y.
it furthei- ,:e olv
ya fixi
th t they
st dium and
nd to occupy
kin
t
yor and
0
r
ft
c py oft is r eoluti
e
t
illt
c.
•
��SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
HURT BUILDING
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
30303
WM. C. BURNETT
GENERAL ENGINEERING TRAINING SUPERVISOR
AREA CODE 404 529-8487
November 13, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor's Off ice
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
I last wrote you on April 2, urging prompt construction of the stadium. I want to let you know that I
strongly support your continued constructive approach
toward making the best of the unexpected situation regarding
our Major League Baseball Team.
I am convinced that you
acted in full good faith, and that the Braves' officials
did likewise. It is unfortunate that legal action was
instituted. I believe that this was truly unforeseen.
I am pleased that you want to go to Milwaukee
to talk to the County officials and to try to work out
some arrangement that will give us some Major League ball
in Atlanta in 1965. If that fails, and I feel rather
confident that you will be successful , then I will support
a Milwaukee farm team next summer.
I again wish to express my deep appreciation for
all that you have done for Atlanta.
I am writing a similar
letter to Mr. Authur Montgomery who wrote to me last April
after I had written to you.
I urge that the stadium be named Atlanta Stadium .
Sincerely,
�
I
n
COtiltlantaJou, ll
r:~wd.u..
143.215.248.55
Th•"';,~;,~;AL LEAGUE PENNANT CONTENDERS- - - - " " " ' l~ y
BRAGAN:
~~;!'!143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST). .
Meet The Atlanta Braves
18
Proves He's Tough Guy to Beat
By JOHN LOGUE
Nineteen Thirty Five was a heckuva year for the Siluril,
Ala., Buckwheat Mills baseball team.
One-tenth of the men man-
aging in the major leagues
today were in that Siluria
lineup.
The incumbent manager
the Atlanta Braves, Robert Randall "Bobby" Bra-
of
gan, alternated between a
"skint" infield and a Johnson Grass ouUield.
And who was on the
mound Wednesdays and
Sundays? "Lum" Luman
Harris, that's who.
In case you aren' t up on
your baseball genetics, Lum
Harris is the new manager
of the Houston Colts.
There "ain't" but 20 men
managing in the major
leagues - and that's counting a head coach in Chicago - and no less than
two of them got their elementary education with the
Buck~·heat Mills boys o(
Siluria. Those were t h e
days when there wasn't any
income tax. Heck, there
wasn't any income.
Bobby Bragan, 46, has
never failed this auspicious
begiMing.
THE
PHILADELPHIA
Phillies signed him in 1937
and he didn't take but three
years getting into the big
time. He hit .2&'i, .298. and
.3ll at Pensacola, FI a.,
where the class of baseball
wasD."
The next three years he
played his second base in
Philadelphia where he was
known more for his batUe
than his bat, hitting o n ly
.222, .251, and .218 for the
Phillies.
Brooklyn liked him and
got him and he hit .264 ..267
(spent 1945-46 in military
service) and .194 and .167
b e fore returning to the
m1nor leagues at F o r t
Worth, Hollywood and Spokane until 1959.
In the interim, he also
managed Fort Worth to the
Texas League title in 1941
his first time out as a playini!"a;:le~ort Worth finished second and fourth and
second and then Qt' man11,zed J-fol!ywoorf, !"!a. to the
Padf1c Coast pennant in
1953. He fin ished second and
thi rd there the next two
years and in 19.'ili made hi!
major league debut as manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
THE MAN was willing
but the flesh was weak in
Pittsburgh w h ere the Plrates finished seventh twice.
Cleveland called and Bragan brought the Indians into
mid-season sixth in 1958. He
finished out the year at
Spokane where that ieam
finished seventh.
His 1959 Spokane team
was fifth and in 1960 Bragan
turned his talents to coaching for the Dodgers and in
1961 to scouting for the
Houston Colts-with his old
Siluria sidekick Lum Harris.
The Br.aves gave the No.
1 job to Bragan in 1963 and
this year extended his contract as a show of faith
aft.er the Milwaukee club
finished firth, only five
games off the pace. Bra·
gan's team won 20 of its
last26gameslastseason.
Bragan made baseball history at Spokane when he
took an obscure, 26-year-old
minor league shortstop and
turned him into a formidable switch-hitter named
Maury Wills. Lifted into the
big time by a responsive
bat, Wills has gone on to
steal I04basesinone season and be named the Most
Valuable Player in the National League.
BRAVES' ASSIST ANTS
DIXIE IN CHARACTER
Dixie Walker is from Birmingham. Jo Jo White, now a
resident of Sacramento. Calif .. is from down the road at
Red Oak, Ga. Whitlow Wyatt, the pitching coach, Is a former
Cracker manager and lives at Buchanan
Walker the Braves' battmg Instructor ls also a fonner
Atlanta manager He ls well quahf1ed to teach hitting, having
led the National League m 1944 with a 357 mark
Wyatt Is In his seventh year as p1tchmg coach of the
Braves, one of the longest tenures m the maJors
Ken S1lvestr1 former Yankee, White Sox and Phillies
catcher,lsbullpencoach
~~ ~~:
ph~
!!::s' ~IT~~e:e h~:~ae~r:~"f:e l~~:r!ka';i":%
Mo.st have worked as scouts or instructors since their exit from
active playing.-WALBURN.
, t
Braves Rode
A Long Trail
To Atlanta
By JACK DOANE
AllaalaJe on,a lAoolol . . 1 ~"'1.IF.41. .
The Braves, original charter members of the National
Baseball League when It was
formed in 1876, have had
many nicknames and now begin a new chapler in their
third city of residence, but one
fact has remained constant
through it all- winning is the
team's tradition.
The team has had many
nicknames. It has been known
as the Red Stockings, Beaneaters, Doves, Rustlers · and
...,_
The club won four pennants
in the old National AssoriaUon
from 1871-75 before the league
was reorganized into the present National League in 1178
with Booton a membe?-. ContNlders were .frequmt .and
i:>lso
rans f'W th·oui:h the
e11rly years. ~oteam in baseball history ls more reno~ned than the 1914 •·Miracle
Braves" who rcsidf'd in the
'liL cellar on Jul)' 18, then
sla~hed through thr rest of the
league and won the Jl('nnant
by ten and onr-half games,
and rocked the fabled Philadelphia Athletics in four
straight games in the World
Series.
That was the last championship uni~ 1948 when Billy
Southworth, m his third season as manager. brought home
the bacon to Beantown. That
was the year of the victory
cry "Spahn and Sain and two
days of rain."
Just four years later the
bloom was gone. After a peak
attendance of 1,455,439 in 1!148,
the club attracted only 281,278
fans in 1952, and owner Lou
Perini gave up the ship and
moved the team to Milwaukee
in March of 1953.
FOR the next four seasol15
the Braves finished second
three times and third once.
Then came the bonanza as the
same old Spahn and his new
mound cohort, Lew Burdette,
brought the pennant to the
baseball-cra1.ed Milwaukeeans.
In 1959 U1e story was the
same-a pennant. Only the
ending changed as the Yanks
rallied from a 3-1 deficit to
win the world's. championship
in seven games. The following
year the team slipped to second and hasn't won a pennant since.
Braves Boast Three of Game's Greatest Stars
H was almost as if the Milwaukee Braves were destined
for Dixie when they hired their present coaching staff,
which is definitely "you-all" in character.
/
BOBBY BRAGAN
Braves' Manager
ta ta a
By LEE WALBURN'
These are stars .. and
then there are superstars.
The Braves have three of
the latter
Few teams can boast three
active all-time greats like
Warren Spahn, Eddie :\lathews and Hank Aaron.
Immortality has already
been reserved for the name
of_ Spahn._Althoug~ he didn't
wm his first maJor league
game until he wa1 2.'i,
Spahn has won over 350
games in 20 )'cars in the
maiors. He ranks ~cventh
on U1e list of history·s greatest winners.
Spahn has
won more
games, pitched more innings, struck out more baltersand won20 games more
than any other lcflhander
no errs
In history. He had only lo
1;trikeout91hittersin 1964
to break Christy Mathewson's Natonal League mark
of2,505foracarcer.
SPAHN HAS led the National League in complete
games nine times, victories
eight times; innings pitched
and strikeouts four times;
C:3rned run average three
times and games started
and won - lost percentage
twice. lo addition he has
wonfourWorldSeriesgames
and an all-~tar contest. He
ha~ hit more home runs
than any pitcher in National
League hi~tory. A year ago
he was named "Pitcher of
the Decade."
Mathews,
who
Bddle
played his first lull season
of baseball in Ponce de Leon
Park, currently ranks as the
premier home run hitter
among active major league
players. Only six men have
ever hit more homers than
the Braves' Bomber, who
had 422 going in the 1964
season.
Once considered a poor
fielder. Mathews worked at
the third base pooition until
he became adept enough to
lead the league in putouts
twice and assists three
times. In 1963 he led all
third basemen in fielding.
He has a lifetime major
league bqtting average of
.280and six limes has driven
in 100 or more runs.
EDDIE LED the league
twice in homers, 47 and 46,
......
if
andholdstheleaguerecord
for most years hitting 30
ormorehomerunsandmost
consecutive years hitting 30
or more home runs. In 1963
he received 124 walks to
lead in that department for
the third straight year and
the fourth time in his caHank Aaron, younger than
either
Spahn
or
Mathews, still has a great future ahead of him. The past
behind him, however, is almost enough to insure his
place among the all-time
greats. He has been called
by some "the finest a\1aroond player in the game."
In 1963 he had one of the
greatest seasons ever ex-
pcrienced by a National League player. He captured five individual titles,
leading the league in RBI
(130),totalbases(370),runs
scored (121), slugging percentage (586) and tied for
most home runs (44). If that
wasn't enough, he stole 31
bases. second only to Maury
Wills'40.
Aaron has one of the
strongest throwing arms in
baseball. He has led league
right fielders in fielding
three times. At .320, his lifetime average is the highest
of any active majoc league
player. Remarkably durable
he has played in 150 games
for IO consecutive seasons.
He has played in 10 consecutive all-star games.
1
I
���You are cordially invited to attend
The Mayor's Annital Christmas Eggnog Party
Thursday, December 24, 1964
from 11 :30 A.M. until 2:00 P.LYI.
r
I
The Mayor's Office
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
�\
�TO:
FROM:
Ivan Allen, Jr.
0
For your information
0
Please refer to the attached correspondence and make the
necessary reply.
D
FORM 25-4
Advise me the status of the attached.
�THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA
P. 0. Box 4148
Atlanta, Georg ia 30302
Personal
Honorable Ivan Allen,
Mayor, City of Atlanta,
City Hall
�'
�PARKs-CHAMBERS
41-43 PEACHT R EE S T REET
EXECUTIVE OFFICES
ATLANTA 3 , GEORG IA
��m . -•
em o, · · FROM THE DESK OF
CARY
B.
WILMER, JR.
Ca~
lme~ f <
235 The Prado. N, E.
Atlanta 9, Georgia
Ctuu
-7
Ai,
~
�THE MORNING AmR
TRIBUNE SPORTS EDITOR
Change of View
ATLANTA, Ga.-A couple of years ago, a visitor to
ifh;1~~f!\it:J:/:P:~:n143.215.248.551~~t
i~ f~:~i~fiinf:C,143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)
of the upper stories, would have had the soft November
sun bouncing into his eyes off tin siding and roofs.
Today, from that same spot, a
the flickering ricochet, but not so
this time it's in color, blue to be
th, ~tcr chairs being set into place
putpose stadium.
visitor again is bothered by
much as before. Reason Is,
precise, from sparkling new
Jn Atlanta's 18 million dual
The new stadium, which will become the home or the
Milwaukee Braves In a year, if not aooner, and one day, a
pro football team, Is on construction 1ehedule. U completed
by April, It will set a universal record for speed in siadlum.
erection and, to be more practical, be worth $700,000 extra
to the owners of the seven huire cranes busylnr around the
area nsterday,
Jan Van Duser, former Tampa sports writer now a key member of Jesse Outlnr's Constitution staff, was the volunteer guide
for a tour of the staggering complex, being built where there
used to be slum and/or near slum housing. The story of this
gtadium, yet without an ending, is one of bold courage, convlction and a handful of men of action.
Future Home of Braves
In the event you are but an occasional reader of such, the
Milwaukee Braves were to shift here beginning this April but
have now been told by the National League to remain in Mlnne1;ota one more summer. It isn't likely to be a financially profitable season there with fans angry at the projected move.
With tacit agreement to move to Atlanta for the 1965
11eason, the contract for the structure was let, Meanwhile,
the St. Louis Cardinals or the National Football Lea111•
came with an ace of shlrtlnr but the city and the Carda
patched up their domestic squabbling with promises of a
new stadium and Stormy Bidwell decided to stay Indefinitely
in the blues city.
Atlanta, meanwhile, holds a glimmer o( hope that the Braves
may yet come for the '65 season, meanwhile ready to invite any
National Football League member who may become disenchanted
at his present surroundings. The American Football League is
ready to exp1md now and probably would take in Atlanta and
New Orleans next fall, ll the two southern cities gave It the sign.
Atlanta, however, probably will hold out for the NFL, a while
anyway.
....
The stadium is but a quarter-mile from the beari of
Atlanta. A major lnt.erchanS"e of all hla'hwan is riS"ht ne:d
Seating for Huge Crowds
It ls convertible. Will seat 51,500 for baseball, 57,100 for
football, all most comfortably. It is a bowl three-tiered and an
excavation. That is, park, walk In from street level and you're
on the second tier. You walk down to 16,455 lower grandstand
and box scats. The upper grandstand seats 25,200. Offices are
built into the structure. Milwaukee has them rent free in the
25-year-contract that is in the vault. Milwaukee also has the
concessions, with a percentage to the stadium authority.
ln a sentence, the stadium is beinl' buiU because the
city's mayor, Ivan Allen Jr,, felt one was needed, saw the
benefits of it, coupled with the pro football and/or major
leag,,te baseball. He went out and got it.
This way:
Allen, a former chamber of commerce president was elected
as the "businessman mayor." His first team for the maneuvering
that brings the stadium and ball club, included Mills Lane ,
c:hairman o( the board of the Citizens and Southern Bank,
Georgia's largest; Arthur Montgomery, Atlanta Coca~Cola bottler;
Opie Shelton, chamber of commerce execuUve director; Furman
Bisher, Journal sports editor, and Atlanta architects Bill Finch
and George Heery.
"All we had to do, those two years ago," said the mayor,
"was rind a club which mic-ht be wantlnr to move, then persuade them to make that move to Atlanta, where we ofrered
them a stadium not yet designed, to be built with money
we didn't yet have, on land we didn't yet own."
Mayor Author of Project
Allen was the author of a "Forward Atlanta" promotion
project and the stadium was one part of this. Biggest assist,
really, came when at least two big league clubs did show genuine
interest.
On assurance of payment, banker Lane got two architectural firms to pool skills to design the stadium. Forty-five members of their staffs worked on draft.! for which there was yet
Deither a contract nor bulldlng money.
Options on urban renewal land, 5Z acres, were snapped
up before it could be broken Jnt.o smalJ pieces. Line was
tn provide almost $700,000 in unsecured loans io finance
the first steps for the stadium which no one had Jet asree,.
to build.
Coca-Cola man Montgomery took the job as chairman or
th• Atlanta and Fulton County Recreation Authority, the official
(ConUnaed on Pase I, Cot. U
Morning After
(CoLUnued from Pare 1)
unit. The group set about talking to the Kansas City Athletics,
Braves, anybody who·d listen.
A two-year juggling act began, trying to get a team with
which to get a stadium to entice a team. Sports fans-and this
was important-and those favoring a cultural center and audl·
torlum pooled support for the passage of the bond issue that
would make it possible. Previously, both proposals had been de·
fcated in bond issues. The joint team or sports and high brows
got the referendum through.
Next, the contract, for construction, and for the blr
lea,-ueUam.
With the disappointment caused when the Natlonal League
chose to force the Braves to remain in Milwaukee another year,
there has been some grumbling, but not much. The minor league
Crackers will play in the swank surroundings this year, on
grass that is already grown in hot houses, as the arand structure
has a shakedown year.
The supreme test foJlows.
A couple of years from now, will those magnificent lnteratate highways which brush against the stadium see AUantans
driving the 70-mlle.an-hour limit to get to the ball game. or,
to get on through the city to whatever it will be that will be
more magnetic, then?
At least, Atlanta bids for an answer,
�8700 west Wisconsin Ave.
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin
November 14,1964
Dear Mayor,
(
I live in Milwaukee.Maybe you do not care about the
Milwaukee Braves but I do. Last year I went to fifteen games.
The Braves won thirteen games and lost two games.I'm not going
to give up the Braves.If the Braves stay, amd I know they will
they .v,111 win the pennet, and shov1 Milwaukee is their home.
Iviy family gets season passes, we are going to use them
all.There are going to be quite a number of fans in Milwauk ee.
1'4 1~
\L
.,
.
Sincerely you,,s ,
���Mayor Ivan Allen:
For your ·information.
from
OVID R. DAVIS
�CONCERNING . .. THE MILWAUKEE
l
BRAVES
11-16-64
Ivan Allen Jr.
I think you know most of the facts,
but I am sure your prejudiced reasoning forces you to
view these facts thru smog covered glasses.
Mr. Allen, consider yourself a
Milwaukee resident.
How would you feel after 12 years
of supporting the MILWAUKEE Braves and suddenly have
them stolen from you.
best t eam
La.st year Milwaukee was the
( out of 20)
11th
attendance wise in the majors .
Can you call this poor support???
NO
Is it
the
fault of Mil waukee and Wisconsin fans
that owners have
spent money so
l ess profit on
fool-hearty and mad e
the whole.
Your eagerness for maj or l eague
baseball cannot be condemned.
obt in
same are
Your
under handed
methods
to
and deplorable.
Baseball has become a touring
with Atlanta as one of i ts stops.
have
as many suckers.
We
Lets hope you
loved our
have caused an unjustified divorce,
source of evil.
Good
Brave s but
with
money
carnival ,
dont
you
as the
Luck in 661.
" ~ l y~
Ron Alberts·
1004 Hanson St.
La Cros se, Wisc.
���=NOV
9 1964
JOHN FRANZEN, JR.
3621 W . CLARKE STREET
MILWAUKEE, W ISCONSIN 53210
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�November 10, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, jr.
Atlanta, Georgia
Sir -
You must be joking (although it certainly is in
bad taste) when you say "Milwaukee shoua:d step
aside in a gesture of good will so Atlanta can ·
have the Braves". How about you practicing a
little of what you are preaching - and let
Atlanta step aside?
I certainly hope the "powers to be" will make
it a little tougher for any situation like this
in the future.
Oh, well - perhaps some day we here in Wisconsin
will have the last laugh????
Miss Ethel A . Stahl
2569 S . Graham St.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53207
P.S.
No doubt your mail
you probably won't
but at least I put
remark "gesture of
is screened and therefore
even see this letter,
my feelings about your
good will" down on paper.
�L/ . - _- .//i - ~
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��Atlanta tries to hit one into the stands
It takes an awful lot of dream or
an awful lot of commercial expectation to make a hardheaded, business-minded city
like Atlanta plunk down $18million for a major league sports
stadium-especially when it
ends up by tagging on an additional $700,000 to insure completion within a year.
Yet that is exactly what Atlanta has don e, and all without
any rock-hard assmance that it
is going to get th e big teams to
fill its seats for baseball (5 1,500)
and football (57,100) . Of course,
Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.,
(picture) and his associates
think they have the transfer of
the Milwaukee (nee Boston)
Braves nailed down for next
spring. But the Milwaukee city
fath ers are putting up a brisk
fight in the courts, and nothing
is yet sealed and delivered.
The bait. The answer, of
course, is that the advent of a
major league team brings with it
a shower of gold-much from
out of town-even if it peters
out after a few years. One survey figures that just in 1961,
after the New York Giants
moved to San Francisco, $11million was spent in the city on
baseb all entertainment.
Atlanta's stadium boos ters
figure their chances this way.
They'll be the first major league
baseball city in tl1e South. The
city's own population -is 1.2-million ; to that add 25-million
people in seven Southeastern
states, tied by a netv. ork of 32
expressway lanes less th an a
mile from downtown Atlanta.
Six metropolitan centers are
within 2½ hours driving time of
the stadium, and there's not a
traffic light to balk them.
On the air. For the first year,
baseball attendance should hit
1.5-million, according to CocaCola bottler Arthur L. Montgomery, one of the project's
sparkplugs. For his part, Mayor
Allen thinks $SO-million a year
would be " a very low estimate"
for the dollar turnover and boost
in sales and services. There are
also rosy expectations for TV
and radio revenu es.
Atlanta is betting that its fine
spring and fall weather should
put it way ahead of chilly 1ilwaukee, where postponements
are a hazard. And even Milwaukee, with a top team and the
first glow of novelty, shattered
all kinds of attendance records.
It took quite a few years, and
considerable downgrading of the
team, before its attendance began to shrink.
�THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL
© 1964, bu Th• J ournal Campanu
Eighty-second Year - 288 Pages
Sunday, October 18, 1964
Circulation Last Sunday. 587,505
Sunday, 25 centl
I.:atest Eilition
tt
usin Feels
Discord 'F;::!~:~~:~: County Threatens Atlanta
USSR Will Last N143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)1 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):.
w· th suI.t to Keep Braves
!°rtbe~.
I
Facin g Opposition, t~t~ 143.215.248.55n~:~:~~;~sc:: ~~;~; :ir~·~:;1~~r~~t1:r
Not Expected to Be
1 - - - - - - - - - , - -Long in Control
l t'~i~:~n' ~:;~rn: :~~ ::!e~~a:!~:~:~=!~:~ AMC, union
New Chiefs Believed Soviet
hierarchy, the!r. back•
Stevenson, Edward R. Murrow,
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)uSria~d ';;;;e~:;~
1
Nikolai V Podgorny, the 61 settmg
0
1
has I_urked Just behind Brezh1 th
0
is.. ~a143.215.248.55 e:u::r
some high off1c1als here as a
m~ to wrch. .
notic~ 0 ~/ s:~s::~~ ::;,e~~=
new _leadenhip were the express1ons of deference to the
eN_•:o~r!:"r::!!~trvtce ;:;at
Walhlngton, D. c. _ The adn,inlltratlon 11 convinced that
there 11 discord In Moscow and
throughout th• Communist
world and that the drama of
"examples
ot excel
le~~·.1
day, will be presented at a din-
6y ~~?Je~6!i!hattD143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):~:=~
will receive as previously announced, th'e society's highest
tribute-the Family of Man
•;~:·society was founded by
the Protestant council of the
~~t:~:
co143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) was
Near
Accord
on New p act
Negotiators in Detroit
no way of know- ~i:::ss~~%o~ ::efo~i:\:d
,,
~
t io~:;;e0:;u!~
143.215.248.55he143.215.248.55::~~ss;~e:ee~ s~~: ~~!!:~inited States information
coa.litlon of contending forces. mg on behalf of these strong Luthul! was designated for
Rr um~ 111·,mg
And they are thought to be en- centers of pow~r or limply sp, leading the tight against the
or The Journal staff
1~fs~f~s7t!oa~ a 'a~rtheid' (white su~remacy) Detroit, Mich. - Negotiator,
countering many expressions
th
of opJ)Osition and doubt from The new Soviet leaden ~re 143.215.248.55n~t}he Sou African gov- for the American Motort Corp.
Communist parties around the sll:'~king respectful]¥ of the l WNDT is an educational tele- and the United Auto Work"n
world.
m1htary budget, which Khru- vision station owned by Educa- bore down on a nonstop barThese views were given to
Turn to PGll*' 2, col. 2
tional Broadcasting Corp.
ga.ining session early Sunday
President Johnson by his prinaimed at reaching a strike set·
d pal national security advistlement before going to bed.
er1 in a White House meeting /·
It was _apparent that both
at noon Saturday.
sides felt 1t was urgent to reAnalysts here said they still
solve the remaining issues in
time to get some work.en back
had no reliable explanation for
BJ' A.VEll:r WITTENBERGEII
G0 Idwater Fears a us .
~h~~d!~~ ~v:~~win1i~~i~~
fs~
~l~~f ;i143.215.248.55':i':.'!n h143.215.248.55
Ske pticism Noted
.
1;:n:~:;1*'~T~:e; ; e-;;0 :;:~:r
f~e t~1a~i ~:;d~I
t~;~~:~
1Saturday, &J)Okesmen reported
i~:ie~~a143.215.248.55 ~~
1
. ~ut there was general s~~p, ~oa~!~a;,cr:~~i:~us:::n~hl~ ..:a~y~~im~:,. c~U:C:,~ the :!!tp:1g~:s
bcism here about th e official "one man, one thumb" federal "We don't want on~ man's the strike w~ich, s~rted at
143.215.248.55;;;~:llo:~:m
Ma~::;::~~ fa~ermo~e: ::i::ti:~g~:r s::~
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)b ~~e o~h;o~:t'fs,;' . ~i~ :i~~'.
The ,complaints ing rights.
g
S::i~~::
=~g~o:i::: ::·
nl•t ))art~ newspaper: ~ere
d:~a~:~:~; pl~c:t:~r::~m;143.215.248.55rat, had rJ~~n~1c~'.~i:143.215.248.55p~n.~:~dg:n~~
rea.~ H broad generahzat1ons Communist China would not be- suggested that Goldwater'• fin- ous venion than that offered
ger should not be on the nuclear the automotive planu in Mildesigned to please the largest ·
possible number of party mem- come a nuclear threat to the
T
waukee and Kenosha.
14
1 2
hen and iubject to a variety of world !or at least 25 years.
urn 10 ,,..,.
' co'
The company contends that
ln~r:~:;!~~:· or a clear In· w!!e143.215.248.55ldt~~: at~::e~;;:.·
r~:~ 3C Killed
as Plane
h . 111· .
!:k~on~:!143.215.248.55t!~ n~:~~i1:
t!143.215.248.55e;: o~~ s~nru;r143.215.248.55;us143.215.248.55 ~eking _can dev~lop a Jaunc~::rs~ther appliance manuracThe quick collapse or the ear- mg vehicle for its new atomic
A union spokesman said some
lier claim that he had resigned warhead. .
Antioch, Ill. _ UPI _ Three progress had been made on this
for reasons of age and health I The Arizonan, hoarse and persons were kill.ed Saturday issue Saturday, but reJ)Orted
was another.
suffering from a week long 1in the crash of a <1mall private 1that. the parties still werfc far
ras es In
Offic~~o.::W:e!ou~.:=!;!
.
~~= .:n~=:~~
InOIS
three miles east of An· a~~':'men;_ ~'!_!_ ~r~ ~~
Aleksei N. ~osygm coulif long1argued over and over that free .
.
rvt>pu _ies Tum 10 AMC, IHIU 18 • col. 2
retain effective control as lead. unioni:oim would be de~troyed taid witnes<1es_ reported seeing
en ol the partr and govern- by centralii:ed government, the plane "spm out and dive Studen ts P rotest A-Blast
rn e n t, respectively. .Though which he contended President intotheground"
T ky J n-JP-Abo t 170
~ri~r!:t:;aro~~ot~~d143.215.248.55= Jo143.215.248.55t::
which the M~t!u~:d te;e.:::143.215.248.55 ~:
= = = = ====lvote of orgamzed labor Is pow- or Oak Park. Ill, Walter H onstrated Saturday outside a
143.215.248.55i~~
!~~f=143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)::e~l143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)\r:~~
On Wisconsin :i~~t:tdu~1~:;!~r::~ed his ~":~~In: a~~· th~r Pl~i ~~ fi~::u143.215.248.55y~hl~~:y h;~:;st:~
1
"o~:un~~n~
a;:: ~~:a~ ~g~1~
Proposed Nominees 143.215.248.55t;~~d :~torc~u~~m:~;!~I
for a 1964 State
nb,t,at,o,
Blight Award
He repeatedly accused John I
Not long ago there was
formed in California a group
which calls itselt the "Los
A~;Ies Grue~ome commit·
tee. rdlts/ un~tio: ~ : make
~~r~ng~on
~::~:'tfir,
49, of
t~~
such rule and could eventually
ma~e labor _the pawn or big
bu;~ness or big g~v~n~;en~. 'f
elec~d s;:;a!~:1~ ~efend ~a:r!,
right to strike, bargain collec:~pl:sh:~n:u I~ ~gl~f~:; ti~:Jd:i:c::b~'fJe ~:'1~iectlon
ron
O
tit~ i:
ofhe temperature climbed to
~~':\T~
tb~ci:r~~lar approach might :~~wh~~hbe~;:~ 0 ~:aih 1~: ~i~ld~
G~eM:~~
be taken in Wisconsin, which man'a thumb thould be on your high for Oct. 17 set In 1956.
has a few eyesores of Its own country and another philosophy It was the warmest reading
worth hailing. Why not call
It the "Wiscon1in Uglies com-
ci~~=~
ho~~,,~i:_:· C. Bartholomay.
board chamnan or the Braves,
y ~~rsr:~~
the nati?n Su~da; n_ight on '.
Conferred at Leng!~
.~~: :~p143.215.248.55so~p;::a~::~ ~~:~ that he had mentioned a
Commumst Chma, first nu-, n.1t~~n:'"t~:rT~ hc~:n:;~ht143.215.248.55;Monday in San Antonio, Hou• Grobschmldt Orders Le:tter
clear test and the power shake- conferred privately and atl ton, Fort Worth and Dallas.
Th& county's letter Pointed
up in the Soviet Union.
length with Secretary of Stale ~ohnson had pl~~ to tour out that a transfer of the club'.!I
.J.ohnson will go before tcle- Rusk and Secretary of Derense1~~y 81:a,\~s
woul/Ybe br! franchise f~om Milwaukee
i;
~~f:~~:~~i:r~~; :::;~. Tuesday and Wed·1~:!~1~;~~r!'i_~Jc~~;
tc
~c
~:~: :~!.~~;.tc~:;~;a~~f=~
Humphrey
South
in
~;~~eR~':~ assistant
A,hev!U,, N, C-UPI-s,, ,_ corpora~on counsel, drafted
and mailed the letter at the recanna~~nt~c~~ttteel~ir: si~"natorBarryGoldwater,thetor Hube": Humphrey talked quest of County Boa.rd Chair~:; ':~ch ae broad':s~ 0 1Republi~an presidential nomi- J)Ower- pohticat and electrical man Euge~e H. Grobsch midt
~~da ?o:~s:~:~~i:~:t~~= ~=(r:~lon~~t1e!:~r:}n°v,ed
tour of the JOU th Sat- :::.
the s ~ live.
" r ~ ~ t ~ hef~re ~e !.h1!i'1u1ed
(Dean Burch, the Republi- sl.art of the secunty council teS-
i: :e
to answer It.
U:~ ~~/
~te~
th,"'"" lhem,e!,o,.J
ln Its announcement _Saturday, the White House said the
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST):J~u~!Y143.215.248.55nc~~::i.143.215.248.55
~~:o~~::·
House. er
source said Goldwater still was
~ri~~i~~ T:~~·~;:ee i~:; ~an~~a~;te!~u:e t! h~;~
Tu,n lo,...,. 2, col, 2
fi::rs1::a~~ec1:~e t~th;:s;!t
Bad gers Beat Iowa 31 . 21
'
'
for First Big Ten Victory
~
~:~~:
th;o~~:;l :~~wngradcd the
military significance of the Chinese nuclear test. He also was
assured Friday by Ambassador
Ana~oly Do~rynin th ~t Soviet
foreign pohcy remained unchanged.
Toe president, who had been
expected to fly to hi, Texas
16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST);/~o:a~tJk!143.215.248.55
~o"e~ ~~t 143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)Lr:- le~!!: c~nt:peeche,.;t Kn?~~le and fo143.215.248.55:Ct~fcft also asked Ri ~e
~:dy
so~!w::t c:~;, tla~;1::.~::h::~fta:
.
a\.S . n . po
ecbut n~ rain was fo recast for the scheduling of a Monday
The Milwaukee Journal en·
the Milwaukee area.
briefing for con~resslonal lead- dones Lyndon B. Johnson for
en of both parties, seemed to president, Page 2, Editorial
suggest some recent change in Section.
The lost art of political
heckling is recalled by Walter Monfried. Page 2, Editonal Section. • • •
British Labor party leader
Harold Wilson is credited personally with winning I a It
week's close election, in an
article by Edwin Roth, Jour-
i;:kl~~n~aiw~i~a~ 143.215.248.55: 143.215.248.55::ia~a:rre;;143.215.248.55iri~~
1wing through the Lone Star Section.
The resort, tavern, restau·
:: o~~dth~~ee~!'ce::1~;;;:;
~tfivert;:~
to broadcast Atlanta
I
~;:~-:i;~ ::~:U~n
~;::ie
'!~~
rights
~i~se::\~~::r~:17143.215.248.55.~=:
,
ton this week. He has not an•
nounced the date, but last week
Journal Wire Sen·lcu
State and other sections of the ,free to accept a standing orfer 1reportedly told the sports weekWashington, D, C-President west, rear~nged his schedl:lle from Joryn~n for secret intelli· ~y. Sporting News, to expect an
1~e;,~ia:~,143.215.248.55rse\~~7::e~:e~~ng th y White ge;~:s~n~f~ncg~ et a r George
Haen143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)m143.215.248.55rd~;
here since Sepl. IO when it make the "report and assessCO SN'S f
b 11
reftchJi~n~tlast Joni;, howev- :143.215.248.55" ..
t~ou~~ ~re=~~ W~!am Nsc!red its°t~~t ~ig
er. By 5 p.m., the mercury cause for national alarm and Ten victory Saturday, defeathad fallen 15 degree, after no immediate emergency."
Ing Iowa, J l -21, before a rec0rd c~td .ff ~- 1~ 3
a S:~:;an~hi:'"w':~ther bu·
AbNpt ShHt of Plan,
M;di-
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)U~i~tg!OO;~i:~
pollute the handsome scenery
ol our state? Candidates for
:iu1:! 4 bligh,t award might
Billboard Interests, which
mar the public view, particu,
larly those that created th&
iuper billboards occasionally
seen from intentate routes.
extol with roadside jungles
of garish sign!.
The junkyard operators
who create whole mountain!
of rusting metal and shat·
tered glass in the midst of
scenes of tranquil beauty.
The litterbugs who strew
our roadsides with debris, our
beaches w ith the razor sharp
flaps of flip top cans and our
waterways with junk.
The subdivision developers
who bulldoze d ow n every
tree In sight and march cracker box houses over hill and
dale, and the ow n e r s ol
shacks and trailers which line
the shores ot once l ovely
lakes, a tribute to bad local
zoning or no zoning at all.
The defacers of parks, the
carvers of initials on benche!,
t he target ! hooters at highway signs and the daubers of
paint on scenic attractions.
With such a roster ot eligible candidates, the awa r d
ceremony m ii;ht take longer
than an academy aw a rd I
presentatJori.
J0 hnson TV Talk tO Assess
Russ1·an Shift Pek1·ng Bomb
I :th~r ~~:~L~!mt!e~:;143.215.248.55
Saturday posed a problem
for the storm window crowd.
st!~~i:d:~ei~.
a better day to leave them
lantawouldthrowlnalucrative
- - - - - - - - ----- - - - - - - - - - - - - l ~ r ! : i ; 7 ~ ~ ~
~:f}n~x:os1on of an th~i~ c~;i~er~J~t~ :ti~ sh;r0:s~;it
Record Tying Heat wave
=~:r~' g~~;~~g :i~\~·u~::~dl~
Gives way t C00 l F t
T,m" '"'" "· <0/. ,
The w eather
"Machine gun alley" is the
coast guard term for the
ocean off the Cuban shore.
~:d a~~a~:/~}!u~n~t~~;;
CompL!•dbyUSW••U.erllurm
co143.215.248.55w,S~~d:;:~;·'t:~:~d~i=~~
Mo.ily cloudy and cooler Monday.
Hirh Sunday mid1iitie1, low Sun,
!ci';i~~t_f:':.:P1t~~:·~i~rthwut
about thi• !re!. •
Hour
j s j s j 1 j a j 9 j1oj 11 j12
She'd rather smoke n good Tem~. 1&~168 67 166 165163 16 1160
cigar than be a dedicated acWllconain - Partly ,unny and
treu, says . ~rah Miles,
0°~d; :~d•:~ol:r~~nd~~ud:ig~~
rear old Bntish nonconfo
and Monday, Occuional rain af•
1st; Page 6, TV Screen Mag- lectinr about half of the northen,
r!,~ ~
azme.
• ·• •
•• ·
Th~eP~c~~:t ~~i::i:.h~~l~
Wells ~ e se; ri b es t~e . art
~r~re~~f~~:~erca~pt~g~~ng~
portfolio of his famou.!I Arizer
na desertscapes: Albert England of Waukesha shows his
political button collection,
and photographert take you
d!~nt~re
i~:143.215.248.55::~!aih.,H!~I~
~~:1i::.u1hc111t; low Sund.y night
Temperature range Saturday, 8 1
~e!ipji143.215.248.55n~n:0 :.~ at 1:15 a.m.;
Temperature range a year ar11
Saturday, 72 and 56; precipitation,
II trace.
Sunri,e Monday, 6:09 1.m.; 1un•
1et, 5:03 p.m.
nd
1::~: m!':,:~~i:":os'143.215.248.55- ~:·d!~ m
Weathcrm11ponp11ge4,p11rt2.
~i
~~n:t!! C:~\d~~ 0
tury.
New Look at China
Peking's Progress Visible, Solid
This is the first of a JO part series
on Communist Chillll, The writer ill a
speciali.,t in far eastern affair, for the
Paris newspaper Le Monde. He recently completed a lengthy tour of Red
China, hi, first visit there 1inc11 1955.
BJ' ROBERT GUILLUN
Senator Barry Goldwater wu greeted by
&irls with bunches of balloons when he
spoke at a campaign rally at the AkronCanton (Ohio) airport Saturday.
-.
'
,
1
1
~!~. T~=te~oth!oo1r!~t~~ \
'We Challenge Johnson to Debate Us!'
a.m. Friday, M1Iwaukce 1- -
Goldwater 1:'tfore a _crowd of re~;:~a~nag;i:O%\~ ~~=m.~~
~ega~;::hi:h~::~:he~s
As he b~ought . the .seventh143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) 3 ·:~i:~r16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST),1~~sitln?!~h143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)i;;;le~~n;;:!'n~;,:;~:tt[~;
in Pravda the orticial Commu- week of his pres1dent1al cam- sure destroyer of freedom any- workers at the Kelvlnator ap,
tra~1ctory.
I
,
Bill Veecb: hits "greed and
stupidity" of Brave, owners.
Story on page I, part 2.
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) f:!~r a143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)eb~t~h:h:143.215.248.55 M1~fea:\~ houn of bargairfog
emment"
• •
OtThaJourn11lSt11tt
County otticlals took their
first legal step Saturday to try
to keep the Brave.,.
A formal notice wu sent to
official• of Atlanta that Milwaukee county would sue them unless they Immediately atopped
trying to entice the Bravea
Atlanta. has offered the
Braves a 25 year leaui for th&
18 mllllon dollar •Ports stadium
143.215.248.55::r !~:n!~1
under 1Man,s Thumb
Drop Offer'
ItGWarns,
c or
O to ourt
lnilucements to Movt!
anil Br ealc lease .
H e r e 'J!..re Illegal,
Letter J\:s serts
St~ve to A g r e e in
Tim e for Full Day
of Work Monday
;;
::~we~:s:~~e~:~u:. a 1 1 ~u~:Zs'°~?143.215.248.55<!n:nf;d~~; ciZte~e:~: ~~rklJnite4 Sta tee
The new leaders of the Ser
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---==----~
Loe Anrele1 Tlmei/Wuhln&lon POst
Nf:WI Servke
Peking, ChJna - Well, let's say It
right away, at the end of a long journey of seven weeks in Communist
China: When Peking's rulers say that
they have "on the whole" succeeded, I
think they are telling the truth.
The Communist regime is now firmly on the tracks, although errors and
obstacles brought it close to disaster.
There has been great general progress,
although there ttlll exist areas-30metime1 immense-of difficulties and
1uffering, as the Chinese concede implicitly and u any objective visitor
can see.
Enemies of communism would be
thunderstruck by the progress; friends
of communism would be appalled by
the problems that remain.
Communism hu won two vlctoriet
in China.
Firtt, it has conquered all sorts of
long standing evilt--Corruption, diaorderliness, disease. The advances I
noted in my last visit in the autumn of
1955 have been consolidated. And if
it is true tbat the Chinese have suf.
fered a famine, they are not hungry
toda y.
But communism has also scored a
second victory. It has decidedly "succeeded"-if that is the word- in manufacturing obedience by pushing its 700
million people through the rollen of
Mao Marxism.
It was in the three day, 2,000 mile
train trip from Hong Kong to Peking
that I witnessed my fint surprise.
There, carved on the technlcolor landscape, was the Immense effort of •
whole people to feed its multitude..
Not a square yard had been left uncul-
tivated, right up to the rails, on the
very embankments, in the ditches,
along the shoulders of the roads, on
und banks temJ)Orarily left dry by
the rivers.
After the years ol the great crisis,
from 1959 to 1961, the plannen in
Peking had transferred priority from
heavy industry to agriculture, and tbe
view from my train window answered
my question: What would Chinese agri,
culture-which is both the bane and
the foundation of China's economybe like in the summer of 1964?
There was a second surprise. The
peasant-in the singular-no longer
exists. No more lone workers, but
teams, 20 at a time, one behind the
other on the paths and in the furrows,
making the same movements with the
same tools at the same time in clusters over the countryside, like platoon,
of soldiers on maneuver.
At first tight. anyone could see tha t
he was in the land of the communes,
Tumtopo.feS,col, J
�CALL
LETTERS
FJT
11/11/64
CHARGE
TO
Book Telegram
Deliver - do not phone
Mayor's a££ice
L64
11 1
23
I I PM 4
I would like for you/ to be my guest, at lunch Thursday
November 12, at 12 :00 noon, Venetian Rbom; 1 ,ct·j:Aita...,,.1___
City Club, in honor of Mr. Thomas J. Reynolds, Jr .
and other Braves officials. Please repl0 - Mr
Drummond, JA 2-4463.
_....----0
4
1
Iv an Allen Jr.
Mayor of A l ·a n,i;a.-_.
t
/'
' hereof, which are hereby agreed lo
INLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
1269- (R 4-55)
�CALL
LETTERS
hereof, which are hereby agreed lo
INLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
�-
..
·1»
,~
C
_A:..,..LL=
1 /~../1 -+/- ·1 _ _
,J,.ETTERlH'" U
fl
0
'1\.10
n
CHARGE
,
TO
Mr. Jesse Outler
Sports Editor
The Atlanta Constitution
Atlanta, Georgia
0 Page
9
z
'864 . 'O't I I
· '
PM
I
' (.
l
'
~ r. Furman Bisher
Sports Editor
The Atlanta Journal
Atlanta, Georgia
Send lhe above message, subiecl lo the lerms on back hereof, which ore hereby agreed to
PLEASE TYPE OR WRITE PLAINLY WITHIN BORDER-DO
1269-(R 4-55)
NOT FOLD
�0
CALL
LEffiRS
Mr. Jack Spalding
. a· tor
The Atlanta Journal
Atlanta, Georgia
CHARGE
TO
Pa e 8
I~
4 37
M t.\ Luke Greene
Editor
The Atlanta Times
A tlanta , Georgia
NJr . George Short
Sports Editor
The A tlanta Times
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29 ~5 Piney Wood Drive
East Point Georgia
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Br ih wick, Ga.
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CHARG E
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Governor Carl E. Sanders
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Atlant 4 ) .Georgia
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1964 UCI 20 AM l I I 3
AA1 0 SSF79
I-A-.-L-LW46 PD 12 EXTRA=ATLANTA GA 20 1040= EST=
MAYOR I VAN ALLEN
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CHAIRMAN OF" THE B OARD
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ATLANTA'
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DREYFOOS
�D avison•s
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��Georgia BHsiness
Insurance Insiders
Silent on New Issue
By JIM MONTGO:\-IERY
Hottest topic in Atlanta financial circles now Is an Insurance
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. The principals and under-
news
on it
a s planted 11m M•,.--.,.
,by them for the sake of peddling stock.
•.; A.nd this is a particularly
":.sensitive time because the
company's stock registration
"Statement is in Washington
awaiting SEC action assigning
·an effective date.
But the SEC also has the
power to delay the issue if it
_;6uspects prem;iture promo)ional efforts.
• 'w
~us~
talking;
. Meanwhile, a call to the
fybl:~e
Business
FEATURES
Thursday, Oct. 15, 1964 ·
Page 46
Fourth Major Producer
Orders Increase for Re-Bars
l'IEWS-VIEWS
UAW Considers Whether to Strike
100,000 SHARES
, .story
e~~=r:1s!~e
·fa~?/ unr:!!:~ ::;Y
THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTIO'."4
and certain of Its partners
and their families, and to
Bache & Co.
"'-Titers greet
---press inquir:,ies with stony
silence, obviously scared
· stiff that the
'Securities &
.J Exchange
·~o mmlssion
· will assume
-any
Youngstown Joins
In Steel Price Rise
~~
~n;143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e~he~s~~
i~f
'{i!:~!~C: o!:te:~~ ; ~
..Wued in Washington, that is,
jlot Atlanta.
-~ The SEC announcement
• lhows that United Trust Llfe
Jnsurance Co. of Atlanta ac·
,.tually filed two registration
Statements on Sept. 22.
United Trust, they reveal,
Approximately 100,000
shares to United Trust officials and members of their
families.
The balance, some 25,000
shares, to prospective investors "who may be valuable in
marketing the company's insurance policies and develoJ>ing business."
The SEC announcement also
noted that United Trust al·
ready has outstanding 75,000
common shares sold at $10 a
share to 15 wlidentlfied preorganizational subscribers, and
that management officials as
a group own 35,000 of these
shares.
It further points out that
United Trust was organized
in Georgia last May, has ol.fices In the Hurt Building,
and intends to conduct a life,
accident and health insurance
business.
NET PROCEEDS
The net proceeds of the
stock sa1e, It adds, are to be
used to meet capital requirements for applying for a Ji.
cense to engage In the insurance business in Georgia and
to conduct an insurance business.
The only company official
identified by the SEC release
is Paul Light, president.
While no background is given on him, his former emJoyer sent out a press reease a few weeks ago announcing the appointment of
his successor and mentioning
that Light had become presldeot of United Trust In Atlanta. That employer was Pan
American 14fe in New Orleans and, as best we can rec:all now, L.ight was vice presi-dent in charge of agencies.
Anyway, United Trust and
its proposed big stock issue
are what have been keeping
Atlanta financial and insurance executives buzzing with
speculation in recent weeks.
,~~eri!iu~~ }:: uand:~h~: r.
~ discounts) through the sale of
·pne million shares of common
stock at $IO a share.
Right olf hand, wl'.! can think
,of no insurance company that
tias ever sought so great an
,lnitia1 capitalization.
One or the registration state'ments covers 750,000 shares,
of which 700,000 are to be
offered for public sale (on
"whatever effective date the
SEC sets) through an under·
--pTlting group headed by Bache
~ Co. of New York and Courts
& Co. of Atlanta.
__.JlO A SHARE
, The SEC said the offering
-.price, which it estimated at
-$10 a share maximum for
~rposes of computing the
~r,143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)at:~~m!~·re a~ ~n:i;
plied by amendment. The re"lnaining 50,000 shares of this
issue are to be offered to per·
·sons designated by the com-
pany.
•• The other registration statei'!'lent covers an additional
115,000 common shares to be
...Dffered through company ofjicia1s at $10 a share as fol-
~Jows :
'"' A tota1 of 50,000 shares in
e(p.lal parts to Atlantic Realty
6Co,, in which a majority in·
).eiest is held by Courts & Co.
We're holding it on October 22nd ond October 27th
(1ome progrom eoch night )
right here in our office
starting ot 8:00 p.m. 1horp
Write Box NC-498 c/o Journal-Constitution.
Lut-minute information from our Research headquartera in ·sew York abould highlight a tborough•going
analysis of the indugtries as a wbole----help you make up
your mind about the individual i&&1es that make them up.
INSURED SAVINGS
NOW
Ji Jii
For a current run-down - plua a good chance to
uk any questions you want to - plan now on join·
ih,
frn
\t_ij \Hi
in~£ u;~u'd like to come, either alone or with someone
else, simply call and' say ~o - or eimply mail ill the
coupon below, There I no charge of coune.
.ij 1~:;f
·------------------------------
i~n ~:n
HIGHEST RETURNS
QUARTERLY DIVIDENDS
1,_-~-·,,;.,!_ii_~
\ ·~,~
!J:ff
tn
I would like to attend your Forum
Thuuday evening
OR
October 22 0
lrn\tn
?i~;:
li~ljj
llffll:ll
,t~JS
CURREMT RATE
DIVIDENDS PAYABLE MARCH, JUNE, SEPT., DEC.
Name
5
Address
~/~~
"The most important investment
you make
is in the sound judgment ofmen.' 1
Robi nson, Humr,h rey & Co. s ince 1894 ho s b« n h el ping
Georg ,o n~ to oeh,eve the ,r pe rsono l f,nonciol goo ls
Co ll
upan our 70 yeors of ex perience o nd knowledge
Let one
of ovr RegiUered Represen tot,ves ou1st you in atto ,n ing
yovr parlieul ar ,n ve~ tm ent ObJecl ives.
Phone
MERRILL LYNCH,
PIERCE,
~ff :!H "'"" ... -143.215.248.55'~' ~-~...'::.•~ ~ !.;.~}
PEACHTREE FEDERAL SAVINGS
MA.IN OFFICI
' SANDY SPRINGS BRANCH
9030 PEA.CHTRU RP., N.W. 6343 ROSWILL RD., N.E.
A.TU.NT.A., GA.
Tuesday evening
October 27 0
~·=·
Robinson, Humphrey & Co.
ir143.215.248.55
ELECTRIC BUILDING, ATLANTA 3
ty J:i
270 Peochtree Street, N.E.
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e; Since UJ9 4
J!ll Jf:!
Telephone : 522-1313
~:erTco;~ ;,t::: ~
~~=~::
1lHI
ii ,Ui
T! _________________ .,__,,_,_,_"_,,_,.._._,_..._.._._"--'·____,._.,_.._"_1__, _.,_•__.
/nsfl/ment
r
Office open Sat1<r""7 ll'l(lrltln1, for your conttniencc.
RhodH-Hoverty Bvilding
Atlonto, Georgie 30301
�1
.
-
Tw
Lo cal News -and Features
Veeck Wants
Club to Stay
Veeck. I saw him for about 30
seconds at the world series in
If the Braves leave Milwau- New York; he didn't say that to
kee, it will be "the worst thing my face ."
Favors Expansion
that has happened in the history of base--~Veeck said he was no t per- ·
b a 11" and will
be due only to
sonally interested in the pro"greed and stuposed new ownership of the
pidity" of the
Braves, "but I would do anypresent owners,
thing, and I mean literally anyBill Veeck said
thing, to help Milwaukee keep
Saturday. The
former O w n er
its ball club. And fo r only one
reason: Because the fans deof the Milwauserve it.
kee B re w e r s,
"!he only conditions . under
who went on to
record breaking '
Vh ich Atlant a deserv~s a maVeec k
Jor league ball club 1s expans ucc ess with
the Cleveland Indians and Chi- sion, which I happen to be in
cago Wh ite Sox, ti:ied to move favor of." .
the St. Louis Browns here in Veeck said the present own1953 .
ers couldn't very well ta ( k
"The only reason I am will- ~bout the attendar:ce potential
.
.
_
.
m Milwaukee "until t hey work
mg to be quoted to t h is effect at t he promotion there."
is t hat I have told the present "Th
f M 'J
k
1
1 wau ee
Milwa ukee owners the same
e . peop .e O
thing t o their face," Veeck said a nd W_isconsm ha v_e proved
i:;aturday in a telephone inter- th ey wil\, support m~Jor,.ieague
wiew fr om his ho me in Easton baseball, Veeck said. If the
Md
' Braves aren't drawing, it is
I Asked for comment at his because t he operators ~ave forhom e in Lake Forest, Ill., Wil- ro.tten iliat baseball IS en~erliam C. Bartho lomay, chairman . amm~nt, aJ1 d that packaging
pf the Braves' board of direc- is as important as t he product.
to rs, said:
Others Have Managed
"I don't thin~ I could . COf!1· "The thing I can't understand
~ent on that. Bill Veeck is Bill about the present owners is
whether they don't know how
By CLEON WALFOOB,T
or The J ournal St art
ry Dr1·ve
Nard LI•tter
to sell baseball in Milwaukee
or whether they don't want to
sell it.
"I realize that revenue from
a million attendance is 1ess in
I
Milwaukee than in any other
ecessary to study whether new major league city, because the
aws w ere needed .
revenue per fan is the lowest
He also suggested more trash anywhere, but there still is no
ontainers and antilitter post- reason why ~hey can't operate
rs. The health education divi- profitably with an attendance
ion would handle the school of a million- unless they e rograms and prepare press pcct something like a 25% reeleases.
t u r n on t h e i r investment.
Rheinfrank told the commit-\Every other club in t he major
ee that the campaign would league has . managed u n d e r
ot show results immediately! th ose conditions.
nd that the additional sweepDoubts Club Will Leave
rs. were needed for immediate "Moreover, all thev have to
e)1ef. Against that need , he do i~ promote hascball, includ•
aid . was the unknown degree mg the v·ist pot ntial of the ri·
f. effed1yeness of the cam- valD' with the ne r-h , Chicago
pa1gn.
. Cubs, as has ne, er hcc- 11 done
Barry said at the meeting in Milwaukee, a nd t hev'U
with Rheinfrank that an effi-\over a million."
l
I
cient campaign would require Veeck, who has been o,'Cic'xr...,..;:..._,,.;
.
. . - t ·
1·11.t: , ·o b
ii ealth in 196 1, had
Ll.lJrary Will Display c.one pe nrting
-hot:
Exhibit on '64 Politics I don'.t think the Braves will
1
. . leave Milwaukee. NQt because
. . ..
A two pa rt e h1b1t. P?ht1cs of the th eats of lawsuits so
1964" will go on display in the \much as because it just doesn't
central puhlic library Tuesda '. make sense to lea e a ft e r
National newspap r and mag- drawing more than 900,000 pera zine endorsements and a com- sons. They can't JHtk up nnd
parison of planks will be ex- leav E!\'C ' time they . cc a
hibited in the ,ciencc area of lchn ·c to picK up a few q uick
the library. Bio~rophical in for- hu ·s.
ports m c n·. How
1mat ion on andidatcs will h g ccd~ cen you get, e, pec1ail •
c.·hibilcri m the t;irc uh1tion m n ,'1-10 t
uppo~r.d to hav
ar, 11
mo r· ., ..
�'1 • • • • • -
, Psrt Two
Lo cal News and Features
Veeck Wants
Club to ·Stay
Veeck. I saw him fo r about 30
seconds at the world series in
If the Braves leave Milwau- New Yo~~; he didn't say that to
ee, it will be "the worst thing my face .
hat has happened in the hisFavors Expansion
ory of base- . .~'-""'•
Veeck said he was not per~ a 11" and will
sonally interested in the prope due only to
posed new ownership of the
"
l'greed and stu' idi ty" of the
Braves, but I wo~ld do any~resent owners,
thing, and I mean llterally anyBill Veeck said
thing, to help Milwaukee keep
~aturday. The
its ball club. And for only one
armer owner
reason: Because the fans deof the Milwauserve it .
. ee B re we rs,
"The only conditions under
..._
which Atlant a deserves a mawho went on_to
ecord break1_ng
V eeck
jor league baJJ club is expan; u cc es s with
. sion which I happen to be in
e Cleveland India_ns and Chi- favo'r of."
ago White ~ox, tried to mo~e Veeck said the present owne St. Louis Browns here m ers couldn't very well t a I k
. about the attendance potential
953.
"The only reason I am will- in Milwaukee "until they work
ng to be quoted t o this effect at the promotion there."
s t hat I have told t he present "The people of Milwaukee
ilwaukee owners the sa11;e and Wisconsin h av e proved
hing to their face, " Veec~ said they will support major league
aturday in a teleph_one mter- baseball," Veeck said. "If the
iew from his home m Ea ston, Braves aren't drawing, it is
d.
. because the operators have forAsked for co mment at h_is gotten that baseball is enterome in Lake Forest, Ill. ~ Wil- t ainment, and that packaging
iam C. Bartholomay, chair~an is as important as the product.
~f the Braves' board of directors, said:
Others Have Managed
"I don't think I cou ld com- "The thing I can't understand
ent on that. Bill Veeck is Bill ahc1u. th ru: enL_o._= ii
By CLEON WALFOORT
or The Journal stat!
�BL.ACKIE SHERROD
They're Right
Off the Bat
A'l'LANTA-The visitor realizes he's in the South's
most progressive spot when old friends m~et him
at the airport with jack daniels and grits and hustle
him through a maze of freeways to where major
league baseballers will soon live.
This is the sleek new stadium being built almost
in the heart of Atlanta. Bulldozers are shoving deep into the 11Jsty
Georgia clay and concrete tiers are thrusting up amid the everchanging skyline of the oldtime city.
" We're going to play an exhibition \vith the Yankees in this
stadium on April 9," says Bob Richardson, a top governor's aide
and one of the forces behind the new sports ambition. " And we'll
open the season in it on April 15."
By "we", the Atlanta citizenry means the Atlanta Braves,
who will make the jump from Milwaukee in a matter of days.
There is much official hush-hush about it, lest an earthquake
or the Supreme Court or some other act of nature spoil the pudding at the last second. And it's typical of baseball's pussyfooting
a ttitude that the Milwaukee-to-Atlanta move hasn't been openly
declared before now.
The Milwaukee directors are meeting today in Chicago. And
they'll vote to approve the shift. The Nationaj League officials
meet in New York later this week and will doubtless okay the
franchise transfer.
The stadium is a rush act. When the Atlanta leaders suddenly decided they wanted in the Big Swim, they didn't waste time
with flim and fadclle and political strings and twiddle dees and
twiddle dums. A couple rich johns said they'd underwrite the
thing, so start digging and all the details would be worked out
later, like dividing the stadium cost between the city, county and
state and retirin it with revenue bonds. So the dirt comTllenced
flying. The contractors ,vill have to forfeit $2,000 every day past
April 15 it takes to complete it.
T
On the Way
HIS CITY desires very m uch to be the sports center below
the Mason-Dixon and it dang shore will be.
It's jus( a question of time until a pro football team locates
there.
Atlanta had the St. Louls football Cal'dinals, for a couple days
anyway. The Bidwell brothers wanted to move their NFL franchise to that city. And the bustling Atlantans offered them a rockbottom rental deal. But when the Bidwells returned to St. Louis to
talk things over, they were offered a better deal by a citizen of
that city, one who owned a small chunk of the stock. So they bad
to pull out of their Atla nta commitments. F or the time being,
anyways.
There have been reports that the Steelers might consider
moving here. Owner Art Rooney bas been seen lunching here with
Ar thur Montgomery, a wealthy soft drink distributor and one of
the go-gettum powers around town. But the feeling now is that
Rooney will nc;it leave Pittsburgh.
The Ameii can Football League, it's believed, would move a
club there at the drop of an invitation. Commissioner Joe Foss,
on a recent visit, warned the Atlantans " not to let too many
trains pass by". Meaning an AFL franchise in the hand is worth
two NF L d ubs in the bush.
�11ym . me contractors will have to forfeit $2,000 every day past
April 15 it takes to complete it.
T
On the Way
HIS CITY desires very much to be the sports center below
the Mason-Dix.on and it dang .shore will be.
It's just- a question of time until a 'pro football team locates
there.
Atlanta bad the St. Louis football Cardinals, for couple days
anyway. The Bidwell brothers wanted to move their NFL fran- ·
chise to that city. And the bustling Atlantans offered them a rockbottom rental deal. But when the Bidwells returned to St. Louis to
talk things over, they wei-e offered a better deal by a citizen of
that city, one who owned a small chunk of the stock. So they had
to pull out of their Atlanta commitments. For the time being,
anyways.
There have been reports that the Steelers might consider
moving here. Owner Art Rooney has been seen lunching here with
Arthur Montgomery, a wealthy soft drink distributor and one of
the go-gettum powers around town. But the feeling now is . that
Rooney will ngt leave Pittsburgh.
The American Football League, it's believed, would move a
club there at the drop of an invitation. Commissioner Joe Foss,
on a recent visit, warned the Atlantans " not to let too many
trains pass by" . Meaning an AFL franchise in the hand is worth
two NFL clubs in the bush.
lie baseball people are
~oun-o-Imffi ffiis sp enclid radiotelevision market. At Milwaukee, tlie Braves are sandwiched between. Chicago and Minneapolis. At Atlanta, the nearest major
league franchise will be Cincinnati.
a
A
· Familiar Faces
ND THE BRAVES should fit right in like homefolks. A couple
of the Negro players, Hank Aaron and Lee Maye, say they
are muchly agin moving to Atlanta because of the segregation
business. But they'll play where they're told, or else get another
~b.
'
Ed Mathews, the Braves third baseman, was a minor league
star here in 1950. Coaches Whitlow Wyatt and Dixie Walker both
managed minor league teams here. Coach J o J o White is a qeorgia native and Manager Bobby Bragan is from nearby Birmingham.
Lloyd's of London once made a study and predicted that
Atlanta would be the largest city in. the world a t the tum of the
next centw-y. At least that's what some local citizens claim.
And it's believeable because the impressive notion _a bout this
city is its drive its scorn of redtape and meaningless hours
around conference tables. There is more a ction than talk. Atlanta
wanted to be bigtime in sports, so some of the riches underwrote
the project and they went out and got results. 1t was as simple
s that.
�_ __,l,,_8_ _ _ _ _ _ __;s::"::.:"d::•:,c:Y•_;O::':::'o:::b•::_'_:l::B,_,~:::•64::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_T_,_H,cE"----"-M'-l- L'-'~'-'-A.:..U"-"K'-'E'-'E"----'-'JO=U_,:R::.:N:...:.:.A..::L:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;s::"::.:"da
= y,_;O::':.:
'o"b,'-r--'182,--'1-"96'-'<--------'P-"a.:..
••~ l -
County Warns Atlanta to Drop Bid for Braves
From ~ · I. c<'l lr.amn 8
s~rf~
You Can Count on Us ...
Quality Cos;ts No More at Scar·s
might be a good time to have,p,,int o_ ut that respect for c_ o,. move_ in the_ county board w;_that they may seek to have.
the Un It e d States sup reme tracU: has been a can:linal rule 1tum over to the Braves all COlbbasebatl made subject to anti-
n~;a:~f n~~n143.215.248.55t fo:l~h 143.215.248.55:,;e-~:::lnl~ \:~,i,!io;i~! ~~t143.215.248.55 :•:~:~lhh~; !h7~'i1. 143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)O r:c;;~~:n0~;70hin:':'!'trust laws if the Braves are
of franchise if the Braves re- said.
waukee contract "will lead to to the club. The county now permitted to move.
Cl ~;! tavu need the approval
. Baltimore Decision
ol~i:~tio~e,!~issfi;; =i~t~ ::i:;~entage of the conce!- b!f'.:ce~r~=:143.215.248.55;e ;s1::r~;· f~
!~:
M'Th~11~tter to Atlanta was ad· Am.erican
leagues. held that fr~~ ~%b~h~~t7oo~:e 1
dressed t o Mayor Ivan Allen, maJ~r league baseball was n~t bait owners.
c~:~:
~ n FF~~ep;e~u:~~
Arthur Montgomery ot the 1:u1ton county recreation authonty,
whl~ ru n, the new Atlanta
Stadium.
It said, In part:
" We have been reliab ly Informed that the city of Atlanta, F uJ ton county a nd the Atlanta a nd Fulton cou nty recreatlon authority, for a considerable period of time, have been
actively 10liciting the principal
officera and majo ri ty atockholder1 ot the Milwaukee Braves,
Inc. . . . t o breach an existing
contract with t he county . . .
and to effectuate a t ransfer of
their p rofessional baseball franchise in Milwaukee to the city
of Atlanta for the 1965 playing season.
Grounds for Sult
"We wish to a dvlH you that
1n our legal judgment, such con·
duct and action on you r part,
lather Individually or in concert, cons t i tutes autf!cient
rround1 for a legal cause of action ag a i n st you and your
bodies politic under the laws of
bnth t he atates of Georgia a nd
Witconsin.
"U n I es s you Immediately
ce11.e and desist fro m thla Illegal activity and courH of conduet, we will be obliged on behalf of the county of Milwaukee
to initiate a auitfor lnjunctional
relief against each ot the afore-
~a':;
~!n~
:s,:~it~~ t;:i?:~
in your official capacities."
Ri ce q uoted a clau se in the
Stad iu m rental contract stating
143.215.248.55ie:,~ ~:~en~ep~ra:is~~I~~ ~~=~:s.or radio and television
congressmen.
Atlanta reportedly has of-
~~!w!~ the federa l anti·
No Replles Received
th~a:143.215.248.55 ot~he;eemo~·: ::::v!~
The county w ill suggest to On Sept. 30, Grobschm1dt sent here
P
other clu b owners that they not letters to the club owners,
·
become a party to the Braves' league officials and baseball
Congress men Act
breaking a contract with Mil·;commissioner informing them of Representative Henry Reu~s
waukeecounty.
the county's efforts to keep the,of Milwau kee and Senator W1IRice said the letter would Braves here, which included a.Ham Proxmire have indicated
1
~i:
5
40.95
Idif!!!! HEAT ELECTRIC DRYER
,
• NOT A WATH PAINT
• EXCEP'TIONAL COYH A GE
• FUME RESISTANT
• EASIH HUSHIN G
• IITTll ADHfSION
A ctress Gi na Lollob r igida and Indonesian
P resident Sukarno joined in a song with
Italian singer Domenico Modugno at a
143.215.248.55;~~. !~:~~ api~!lei::,uin :~na~~ee~~=
Wondr-1.ux
Monday, the Vatican announced Saturday.
LATEX WALL PAINT
AMC
From,,,._.
J , colt1mn"
con1truction) for the 1965 play- announced Sa tu rd a y, was
held ne.xt Saturday and Sunday
in,i seuon" but ad~ed that "!he reached about an hour be~or_e ·A. mt.bronze_sculpture o.f anl A series of guided tours, recep.
: : :ye~~proach
not bemg 143.215.248.55:St~~=
]r"
n~~:t ~hoe~}\;;~uk:S
tiOnS, special masses, a concert
_e.rth~lomay Got Orter
Ri~e said ~ fort., by Atlanta
0ff1c1als to 1~uce the Braves
~.o breach their .con~.ract were
most reprehens ible.
He exp,:esae_d reluc~_nce to
~~i~ia~s~ 1 1~:ut~ 1;,;7t~~r~':
ROEHl'CK .-\:-ID CO
~el~i~.~OeO Bc~::ac~
ae;i~
and television rights or a S7,500,000 five year contract. The
Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. has of-,
fered the Brave_s a S525,000 a
yea r broadcasting contract if
the team stays here.
~
1
Democrat Casts /MU Parents W eekend
Bronze Elephant W ill Begin Satur~ay
~~es; ~~a~~!~ai~o!:•:id~ ment, the details of which were Given Goldwater slt:11~:::~:~ ~:143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)e ~~:V~
I
J;:
SEARS
~
'"th,
"""'
will
pt,, ,11
home game.
at the
Stadium.
"e1:n143.215.248.55: ~:!:~tl:,n:::~.rit1~
SAVE
x:~"::~
of six other .clubs ~o move.
This de c Is Ion, In a case in which they (the club owners)_ Grobschmidt has received no,e!'l communications comm1sGrobschm1dt said the letter brought by the old Baltimore wm,~ld ~ft want to become em· replies from any of the baseball sion to determine whether a
t o othl!l' owners would be sent club against the National a nd b roiled.
!officials He did receive several.move by the Braves would be a
143.215.248.55n:,:~
i::~r:.::143.215.248.55pe\~::
s::s:!~~ti~~:. cash bo ·
About 8,600 workeni In Mil·
waukee, 12,500 in Kenosha and
3.000 in Grand Rapids are in·
volved in the work atoppage.
Police in both cities said
pic~eti"r!-~as ~rderly ~turda~.
~:yo~:~~ s143.215.248.55!:a~ Bartholo- mlt~ t~i·~~!
1143.215.248.55w~N.
lC:ic:~
l/ ~~:~~nt~h:ff1~}~:!,re~~:i ;7h:~oo~i.pl:n~~
·i:~
~;r~~ to Jo7c.5!:~~tl ~nd11~~
Wisconsin Repu~hcan_ party ~o
commemorate h is visit to Mil·
waukee Tuesday..
. .
The sculpture 1s six mches
high and seven inches long. It
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tomin at IU5 p.m. Saturday at
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activities a 1 p.m. Sunday in
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prica 1r•lo• prie.,.
Free
Episcopal Seminary
to Hold Open House
Ele~tri~
Blanket*
Was hington, D. C. - JP - A
British embassy spokesman said
J::~a~t:~;~~';::~~;~~e :~ro:r:a!oU:~!;:~eca: h:i~
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campus and solemn evensong post as a m b a s sad or to the
wi ll highlight t he annual open_United States for seve r a l
house at 1'.'ashotah House Epis· months and had agreed to do so.
copal seminary Sunday.
The request was said to have
The Rev. lmri W._ Bl~ckbur_n. been made by Britain's new for.
professo r of ecclu 1asl!cal h1s- eign secretary, Patrick Gordon
to ry, wi ll officiate a t the even· Walker. Indications were that
,ong cerem o n y. The Rev. Lord Harlech would be on hand
Thoma. J : Talt_ey, as_sistant pro· 1when Britain's new prime m_in_isfessor of h turgics, will preach. ter, Harold Wilson, meets with
The seminary is located off President Johnson. No defmite
Waukesha county t runk CC be- date or place for the meeting
tween Delafield and Nashotah. has been set.
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DE NTAL SURGE O N
957 HUNT ER S T R EET, N . W .
AT L ANTA 1 4, G E O R GI A
1 0... 17 ... 64
Dear Sir:
Enclo s ed is a copy o f the wire sent to
Mre William Ce Ba rtholomay of the Milwaukee
Br aves or ganization 9
If I c a n be o f a ny f urther as s ist a nce a
ple a se c a ll on meo
Wi th bes t wi she s fo r your con t i nued
s ucce ssa I r emain ,
�Y OCT
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41 PD• EltT
Will IA~ C BARTHOLOMA
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2 NORTH R vF. SIDE Pl~ A
I\TLANTA HAS A
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57
�WESTERN UNION
SENDING BLANK
CALL
LETTERS
Fa
t
CHARG E
TO
T
• GAULTll1'
Copy t:oJ Mr . Opie L. Sheltoa
/
Mayor Ivan Allen, .Jr . v
Send the above message, subject to the terms on bock hereof, which ore hereby agreed to
PLEASE TYPE OR WRITE PLAINLY WITHIN BORDER-DO NOT FOLD
1269- (R 4·55)
�City of Atlanta
Parks & Recreation Dept.
MEMO
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You were call ed by
Please call or reply
Returning your call
Will call again
L e ft this message
SJ
Da te - - - -- - - - -
O
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You we re vis ited by
Waiting to see you
Wishes an appointment
Please Route
Please take action
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What,
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Mayor
Ivan Allen Jr.
of Atlanta
CHICAGO, Oct. 21 - (AP)
MIiwaukee Braves
board of directors, by a 12 to
6 · vote of members present,
asked the National League
Wednesday for permission to
shift the club's franchise to
Atlanta, Ga., for 1965.
is all smiles
as be
-The
telephones
friends t-o give
them the news
of the
Milwaukee
Btaves' decision
to move their
National League
The action at a meeting from
which newsmen were barred w ill
be considered at a special league
m eeting in New York Thursday.
The Bra ves need six ot her club
owner votes to switch from Milwau kee where former owner Lou
Perini brought the team from Boston in 1953.
Against a co m i c opera background1 the Braves' decision to
move to Atlanta was announced in
baseball
to
.; thefranchise
southern city
next season.
~
...;
N
t
0
.
,.;:.
The move bas
long been
rumored and
became official
\ Vednesd ay.
~::,
i=
a terse prepared statement issued bearing on th e Braves' action
after a two hour directors' meet- Wednesday was conjectural.
ing at a swank n e a r northside
However, P. K. \Vrigley, ownclub.
er of the Chicago Cubs, was
The statement was distributed
quoted as saying he would not
to newsmen by Ernie Johnson,
oppose the Braves' move because
club publicity director, at the
he believes in "free enterprise."
newly-established Braves' office
Wrigley noted he did not opsome four miles from the site
pose Perini's shift of the Braves
of the directors' meeting. No top
from Boston to l\.fihvaukee a-n d
club official was present.
The long-expected m o v e came suggested he would not oppose
another
move now.
one day a ft e r league President
President Roy Hofheinz of the
Warren Giles called the special
league meeting in New York to Houston Colts said he would at"further discuss the Milwaukee- tend Thursday's New York meetAtlanta situation and take action ing with an open mind. "I'm not
thereon.
certain yet how I'll vote."
Giles reportedly talked to club
The minority opposition in the
owners by t e 1 e p h on e Tuesday Braves'
shift vote was disclosed
morning. Whether h is conversa- by Edmund
B. Fitzgerald of Miltions with the o w n e rs had any waukee.
In a prepared statement a few
hours after the meeting, Fitzgerald said he and fi ve others were
unaltera bly opposed to the move
which he said would be detrimental to the Braves, baseball i.n
general and would " violate the
public trust which has been placed
in this or ganization."
The other five negative ,•oles
included directors Duane Bowman, l\'ladison, Wis.; .Daniel
Parker, Janesville, l\Tfs.; John
Puelioher, Joseph SilllJJson Jr.,
and Carlton \-Vilson, l\Uhva.ukce.
Fitzgerald's 6-page statement
particularly
criticized
Braves'
board chairman William C. Bartholomay of Chicago and club
president J ohn McHale for previous statements indicating the
Braves would remain in M.ilwaukee.
Conspicious by their absence
at the statement issuance \\'ere
Bartholomay and Braves' executive vice president Thomas A .
m:,1c.f~
........
_,
":)..
~
.
..... 'l,,
the milk demands of his children at the breakfast table. From left
are Eileen, 7; Kevin, 5; Cathleen, 12; and Colleen, 13.
- UPI Telephoto.
Milwaukee Mov,es to Prevent Shift
MILWAUKEE Oct. 21 - 1corporation counsel winging to
(UPI) - The ' Milwaukee Circuit .Fudge Ronol<! Drechsler
County Board of Supervisors with. a 40-plc:s page document
\
back1n:g up then plea. The super.
W d
e .n~day obtam.ed ~ r~- visors had appro ved a resolution,
strammg order m c1rcmt 19-0 urging court action to keep
court which would make the the Braves here.
Braves in contempt of court Drechsler set next Tuesday for
if they ask the other National " show cause hearing on why th e
League owners· Thursday for county should not be granted a
temporary mJunchon to keep t he
. .
perm1ss10n to move to Atlanta, Braves from moving until a full
Ga.
court hearing is held on the mat-
The supervisors, reacting w ith ter.
urgency after the Braves anOn other fron ts:
nounced their intentions to seek
Gov. John Reynolds from the
a new home, sen t the county executive mansion at Madison
put all legal resources of the
state at the disposal of the
county in its court fight. He said
"it's a sad day for baseball."
Mayor Henry Maier said the
PHOENIX, Ariz., Oct. 21 (UPI)-Virgil Carter of Brigham Braves' aclion would remove the
Young University Wednesday was illusion that baseball was a sport
than a business.
named the Western Athletic Con- rrather
11
I think the circumstances of
ference's Back of the Week while
this
transfer
d efinitely gives baseend Darryl Alleman of Wyoming
won his second straight citation ball a black eye," the mayor said .
"
I
am
completely
disheai-tened
as Lineman of the Week.
Alleman was chosen again this
week "because his play against
Texas Western Saturday was
Ed Williams used a 6-iron to
rated as the greatest end per- register a hole-in-one on the 120formance at Wyom ing since 1951 yard first hole at Windsor Garand eclipsed _that of comijetitors dens Wednesday. Witnessing the
for the weekly honors.
shot was Hank Rickelton .
Wyoming's Alleman
Is Honored Again
Gets Hole-in-One
that the Braves' management
would break not only its contract
committment to the country, but
also its moral committment to our
community," the mayor said.
Other government, civic and
business leaders denounced the
move.
The circuit court action taken
by the supervisors is based on
the county's contract with the
Braves which calls for the team
to play all of its home games in
Milwaukee County S t a d i um
through the end of the present
contract-or through next season.
The county corporation counsel
said that if the Braves go through
with their plans to get league
approval Thursday in New York
for a move, they will be in con-
White Sox to Travel
In Own DC-7B Plane
CHICAGO, Oct. 21-(AP)-The
Chicago \Vb ite Sox will travel in
their own plane, a DC-7B, next
baseball season.
The company, headed by Arth ur
Allyn 1 owner of the White Sox,
bought the 56-passenger craft tor
an estimated $1.25 million. The
White Sox will use the plane on
all trips with possible exception
of West Coast jaunts, when commercial jets may Be used.
Chica,go
]awyer,
1
He'll Need All That Energy
Red Schoendienst, the new manager of the St. Louis Ca-r dinals,
gets in a little off-season "managing" as he tries to keep up with
-Jr.,
who reportedly own 40 percent ot
the club's stock.
Absent at the directors meeting
were Perini, said to still hold 10
percent of the club as chair man
ot the Braves' executive committee, and another director Coach
Vince Lombardi of the Green Bay
Packer s.
Meanwhile Milwaukee govemment officials, civic leaders and
fans j o i n e d in criticizing the
Braves' action.
"This is a sad day for baseball,
said Wisconsin Gov. John W. Reynolds. "The owners of the Braves
are showing a callous lack of faith
in the people of Milwaukee and
Wisconsin.
I pledge all due resources of
the state to the Milwaukee county officials in their legal efforts
to prevent the move, and I am
requesting the attorney general's
office to make its staff and facilities available to 1\-lilwaukee
county in these legal efforts."
Mayor Henry Maier said the
Braves' ac tion would remove any
illusion that baseball is a sport
rather than a business.
" I think that the circumstances
of this transfer definitely give big
league baseball a black eye,"
Maier said. " I think that as this
story is told baseball generally
will not feel that the joy w ill have
been worth the pain of it."
Rep _ Clement Zablocki (D-Wis)
said he believed the Braves' move
would be the "straw that broke
t he camel's back" regarding government action to regulate the
sport under federal anti-trust
1aws."
tempt of court. The office said
the possibility also ex isted that
other National League owners
could also be held in contempt of
court if they take a vote on the
Braves' proposal.
Notre Dame Drills Stress
Passing for Stanford Tilt
~OUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 21 (AP) Second - ranked Notre
Dame's football squad concentrated on passing in a 20-minute
sc rimmage Wednesday for the intersectional clash w ith Stanford
here Saturday.
\
Quarterbacks John Huarte and
Sandy Bonechio alternated in
passing, mainly to split End Ja ck
Snow and right end Phil Sheridan.
Ranum W·ins Skyl"ine
Cross Country Title
Ranum won the Skyline P rep
League Cross Countey championhip Wednesday with 15 points at
143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST)a~f T~t~~lftJi::Je·inG~~
best time al 7:46 over the mile
and a half course.
Adams City finished second with
38 and was followed by Westminsler 59, Thornton 66, Mapleton 70
and Fairview 79. Brighton did no t
participate.
Wes_t_e_r_n_S-ta- te_ R_a-nks
15th in Grid Poll
Western State College was 15th
1Wednesday in the weekly United
Press International small college
football ratings. The Mountaineers
had one first place vote and 30
points.
Wittenberg set the pace with 12
votes for top spot and 245 points.
�-
DOWNTOWNER MOTOR INNS
�From:
C
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I
�([him!lO CU'ribnnt
I3
SE CTION
SPORTS • BUSINESS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1964
~
BRAVES DELAY REQUEST FORTRANSFER
lJ. S. Meets Russia for Basket
Title~BOWTORESTRAININGORDER:
~ Mil-wau- kee-Sa-y
s -,80 -Lon-g' ~,
GILES TOCALL 20 MEETING
Fri ck I s Asked I
to Clear Rights
to Atlanta
Hockey Standings \
NiTIONAL LEAGUE
Monltt ol
TaraMo
W. L. T. Pll. 0 . O.G.
• • • 2 o 2 6 13 I
••• ••• •• •• . 2
•CHICAGO
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6 17 10
S 14 I D
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7 21
LAST NfGHT'S RESULTS
i:::ni;~~; ~~!::iJ:
Braves to Atlanta was post· advised they are under a re-
~irna1~int;1: lur~~;~:~.
~utci:b
straining order not to make
officials expressed hope that the any request for a shift of (ran.move will be made as soon as chise."
the legal entanglements are
Giles said, however, that the
cleared up.
Braves had asked Baseball
Warren Giles, Na t ional league Commissioner Ford Frick this
1:
~::143.215.248.55 16:27, 29 December 2017 (EST) a::~f:!m1~~
league meeting that the Braves
did not ask the league to vole
on the proposed switch today
because " they just have been
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - , ,
morning for permission to move
into the Atlanta territory and
that he had been given authority by the league's club owners to call another special meet,.
ing as soon as the Braves feel
they are legally free to make
their transfer request.
Will Consult Attorneys
Wi l I i a m C. Bartholomay,
chairman o( the board of the
•Mempbil st.. 11; MeNee1e, must play all their home games
Iowa Central. 11; CarCbage, ,
Kalamazoo, 27; •o llvet, I.
2·
•
in Milwaukee County stadium
Vaaderbllt, . thru the 1965 season.
Kan~a,, 16; •Oklahoma S&., o. 1·
I The club owners listened to
::!on6; 2 ~ =~~:
7. • Mississippi St .• 29; Houston, : a half - hour plea to keep the
!:
TR!Rt'NE STAFFED
Mis1J11ippi, 27;
•Nor th Carolllla, 21;
Lakel~nd , 12; •Chicago DUni ,
Soa111 : : :
Oilnols, 28; U. C. L. A,, IS, 7.
Carolina, 7.
Penn St .. It; •\Veit Vlrlglna,
•Michiga n, 19; Minaesota, 14. Luther. 33: •Wartburg, 7.
' "arleUa. 28: Otterbein, 12. 14.
•Mkbigu St. • Z3; Northwest•Marshall,
14;
Lolllsvllle,
o.
j
Richmond 12; -Eut Carollern u,,
fO.l , 14: ' Obio l (, 13. na, O. .
11 •Notre Dame. 27; Stanford, Miami
Milton, 10; · Eureka, 1.
• vtrgima. 14; North Carolina
1
II.
St.. 8.
•f)hio St., 25; Wisconsin, H . •Missouri. 12; Iowa St., I .
•Mount Union, 21: Hiram, 8.
Virginia Military, 21l ; David·
l'urd:ue, 9; Iowa, 6.
•Muskingum,
22;
Wooster,
15,
son, 13.
17
MIDWE ST
Ne braska, 38· COlora4o, IZ,
Wil~am & HM,. 12: •Geerge
to
~for th C e n t r a 1, 13; "Nortli: Wasb1ngton, t.
Adrian . 13; •Alma, 0
I
Albion. ZO; ' Hope, 6
Park. 7.
'Northern Illianil. 20; EastAntle-non 17· Mencbelter, I .
SOUTIIWEST
Arkamas, tJ: Wk:ldle. e. al
chal
inH~i:::-t':c1:~dbl,
of the Mil
COUDb'
rman
bDard
of
1111
~
1"bo ~ , Oar 1ep1 poa~
tion Is tavlndble.'
• If this league and you. gen.tlemen consent to 8 francbi8e
shift " Grobschmidt told the
own; rs, 1'the National League
of professional Baseball Clubs
itself, and each member club,
must allO be aubjected to extended llli8ation.
- - --
�Governor J h
on W
· ReYnofds
~~
PROGRESS
~r-'W -~ ~
- { # - ~- ~ I
~ ~-:br ;tJl)lv I
I
'
Senator William Proxmire
J,;~~l~
. , ~ ~r ~
t
~ I V ~
·1
l
�Increased
Individual
PERSONAL INCOME
PERSONAL INCOME
23 °/c since 1958rose more than $2o 380 in 1963.
[rom $1,936 ~~ PERSONAL IN·
This year to~
. will top the
E · w 1sconsm
.
COM _m
·k £or the first ume.
$10 billion ma1
$2,400 r----r---r--t---t--
• State aid to local schools increased by $36 million-a boost
of 100%
2.300 t---+---t--+2,200
t---+----
-
• Democra ts developed mental health program-one of the
nation's best-county hospital aids up $3 million, number
of beds in state colonies up 2,000 by 1966
~-L-----:---11
0-
0
.-
N
Rapid
M
°' ...°'"° °'"° °'..."° ...°'"°
• Democra tic governors created greatest conservation program
in America-budget up 66 %-new Outdoor Recreation Pro7
gram saved forests, lakes, streams worth $12 million
II)
ECONOMIC GROWTH
·obs in
d thousands of new ]
0
create . manu fac turing - 3,20
Wisconsin
Newly-built factory
in 1963 alone.
l d 6 2 million
ear tota e
.
d
l
Y
space ast
an. all-time recor .
square feet,
1 e will reach
· g vo um
Manufactunn .
d in 1964-UP
$r, 4 billion estimate '
J.
01 [rom 1958.
almost 42 10
• Democra ts won fight for "one person-one vote"
• $10 million needed Tax Relief for 150,000 Wisconsin citizens
over 65-a Democratic victory
Healthy
ECONOMIC GROWTH
• Careful planning by Democrats saved taxpayers $3 million in
building costs-Democrats bui_lt $240 million in buildings
for colleges
$6.0 r---r--r---;--1---t
5.5 r-----r-t---t--+-----1
5.0 r-----r-t---t--+-,
L-----------t1
4.5 r---+----1r--+4.0
but what about
the farmer,
the workingman?
PROSPERITY
Auth o ri zed and p a id fo r by Th e Democra tic
Pa rtv of Wis., J ohn Durand , Field Di rector, 207
E. , vas hin gton A1·e., M adi so n, Wis.
. • . l
�The Democratic Party is the party of
the farmer and the workingman
VOTE
FOR THE FARMER it will continue to work for
• Higher milk supports
• Low interest loans for buying
machinery
e Keeping Food for Peace and
Food Stamp programs
• Crackdown on pricefixing by big food firms
PROCiRESS
~ -~~
FOR THE WORKINGMAN it will continue
~~-~
to support
~ _;to-~
• More workers protected
with unemployment pay
• More compensation pay
President Lyndon B. Johnson
• Minimum wage law for all
workers
• Retraining ancl public works
programs
IN
1964
Senator
Proxmire
W·mam
1
~
L~ "o/Yu-ai,tTP
.,
~
~
r
~
~ 4 / ~
�COOLER
•
* * * * * FINAL
34 PAGES- 3 PARTS
Bans State Sales
I
TODAY
the News
THE CITY
C. WHITNEY, city budget supervisor, .reported
EDWIN
that 1965 appropriations approved for city departments so far will require an increase in the city tax rate.
*
The Milwaukee Braves have made no commitments to
leave the city, and never have had any such offer to move,
John McHale, president of the team, said.
A 14 year old Milwaukee boy was killed and a 15 year
old companion injured seriously w hen the stolen car in
which they were riding careened out of control during a
police chase and crashed int o a tree in Whitefish Bay,
police said. The dead boy was Robert Stenzel, 4466 N.
28th st.
•• • •
Voters in the Elmbrook school district approved a $4,-
535,000 bond issue for school construction and refinancing
of Joans. A total of $3,885,000 is to be used for a new
junior high school and an addition to Pilgrim Park junior
high in Elm Grove.
• * •
THE STATE
party at its meeting in Madison adoptTedHE aRepublican
state platform opposing a general sales tax on
food, clothing and prescription d rugs. The plat form reflects the views of GOP gubernatorial Mminee Warren
Knowles .
* *
Democrats quickly finished their official business at
their statutory platform convention in Madison and then
adjourned to the Loraine hotel there to get down to the
serious business of tellmg candidates how to beat the
Republicans m ovember.
• • •
THE NATION
NO COMMITMENTS, McHALE
SAYS
.
Braves Deny ·Move
Offers
He said that certain factors
000 annual i n c o m e for the
Braves.
have entered the picture to
In a later interview with The
"help us make up our mind."
Sentinel, McHale said that the
These factors, he said, were
Braves might have made a deMcHale also said that "we
an offer frim the county board
cision about moving earlier in
have nE.ver had any offer, as
to renegotiate the Stadium conthe s e a s o n, ' but then " we
such, to go anywhere."
wouldn't have had anything
tract, giving the ball club all
from Schlitz or the county."
concession revenues, and a new
McHale appeared on a taped
radio. and television offer from
Mchale commented that peotelevised news conference, "The
the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co.
ple probably will say that, "You
Bobby Bragan S h Cl w" on
have used t his to bargain."
It is estimated that both offers
WTMJ-TV, The Journal Comwould mean an additional $250,"But this isn't true," he said.
pany station.
________________________________...:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The Milwaukee Braves have
made no commitments to move
out of the city, John McHale,
Braves' president, said Tuesday.
•
Heredity is what makes the
mother and fat her of teen ,
agers pause at times to wonder a little about each other•
(By carrier,
45 cents w eekly )
on Food, Clothes
.
In
TODAY'S CHUCKLE
TEN CENTS
WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964
-
• • •
INEL
MILWAUK_E
Sunny, coo I e r Wednesday and Wedn·esday night.
High Wednesday midfifties.
Maps and tables on page i.
"We have never implied that
we were dissatisfied."
He sa id that the B i· aves
have had no "subsidy offer"
from any other city.
-Spells Out
Views of
KnOwles
He later commented that his
earlier use of the word "subsidy" in regard to the county
offer was an unfor tunate one.
It should instead be called an
Turn to Page 8, Co l. 4
_ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
By RICHARD BRADEE
Sentinel Madison Bureau
Madison, Wis.-A new state
platform, spelling out opposition to a general sales tax on
food, clot hing and prescription drugs, was a<lopted T esday by the Republican pa t~·
to reflect the views of W arren Knowles, the party's candidate for governor,
The document spelled out in
detail what Knowles a nd other
candidates for state offices
hope to accomplish if elected
in November. It is different.
from cover to co\'cr, fro m the
platform adopted b> the st11te
Republican convention in Milwaukee in May.
The action was taken at the
party's statutory platform con\·ention, a meeting of candi·
dates for state·\\·ide offices and
the legislature. Normally, the
statutorv con\'ention adopts the
platform written earlier b>· thf'
rnluntary party organization in
state convention.
The new platform prop0sccl
mam· specific piecPs of leg1slat1()n. Included ere proposal
to
I • Stabilite the tax hase with,
lnut
ncrnl 1le ~ on fnorl,
clllth!ng net presl I t•on dru
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.
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�TELEPHONE
MESSAGE
To_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Name----------------------Telephone No. _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ __
D
D
Wants you to call
D
Is here to see you
Returned your call
0
Came by to see you
0
Left the following message:
Date :_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ T ime _ _ _ _ _ _ _ a . m. / p. m.
By---- -- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - FORM 25•5
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�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2 •4463
Linda Hammond
�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2•4463.
Linda Hammond
�WE KNOW OF NO MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CLUB WE WOULD RATHER HAVE IN
ATLANTA THAN THE MILWAUKEE BRAVES AND URGE YOUR FAVORABLE
CONSIDERATION 1_~
WE PLEDGE OUR FULL SUPPORT _;:l!J.!fflb
�-OFFICE OF INSPECTOR OF BUILDINGS
MEMO
From the desk of - -
October 15, 1964
W. R. Wofford, Inspector of Buildings
TELEGRAM
MR. WILLIAM Co BARTHOLOMAY
THE BOIi.DING OF ATLANTA NOW AND IN THE
FU1URE IS MY JOB AND MAIN CONCERNo
I
POINT WITH PRIDE TO OUR RECORD OF
UNSURPASSED GROWTH THIS YEAR.
WE ARE
A GROWING, ENTHUSIASTIC AND BRAVE CITY,
AND IT WOULD BE OUR PLEASURE TO HAVE
THE BRAVES JOI N US IN OUR GREAT FU1UREo
Wo Ro WOFFORD
BUI LDING OFFICIAL
CI TY OF ATLANTA
�ATLANTA,GEORGIA
PHONE JA. 2 •4463
R. Earl Landers
w /.I I /;?.z x
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�ATLANTA, GEORGIA
p HONE JA. 2 -44 63
R. Ea rl L anders
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(l-t_la.YJ-ra_ ;~. -rhe hvb o/'+he
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love Sf>ort.s
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<.:ow,e -to A-1/q,,,t-~
sc;1.r the.cts-r.
would welcowe
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s . W. G,--'o/c/1:>11
.s·ct '1; 1-a r-y /3 YI J·
C. ; >fy
of
A ti t1. .,-ti(_
�December ll. 1964
Mr.
arz n. C . Gile , Pre id nt
T
National League of
Profe icmal B
ball Clubs
C r w To e r
Cincinnati 2, Ohio
r
D
r . Gile :
We
ry grateful for our l tter of Deeember 8th
r ly ho that Atl ta will be c
id red f r
jor Le gue meetin i 1966. J am sui-e yo
11
be
ring from our Con ntio Bur u reg rdin
formal mvUati •
ry effort to hav a s cce afw o n1A
1966
1 c r inly ho y
e rly date o yo
y ._
r
diu.m.
ith be t
bh
fo.r th holida •eaa
I am
Sincerely y<>ur ,
l
'lAJr/ r
CC:
M r. Fur m a n Bisher
M r . Wa l t er Cr awford
Jr.•
D
Y'
r
�Th e NATIONAL LEAGUE o,
PROFESSIONAL BAs EBALL CLuss
CAREW
TOWER
CINCINNATI 2 , OHIO
December 8, 1964
Hon. Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor, City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Mayor Allen:
This will acknowledge telegram sent to me at Shamrock
Hilton Hotel, Houston, extending an invitation to the Major Leagues
to hold their convention in Atlanta in 1966. The invitation was
extended by me to our League in session at our Annual Meeting and
Bill Bartholomay urged our League to accept the invitation.
Mr. John Galbreath, President of the Pittsburgh Baseball
Club, extended an invitation on behalf of Pittsburgh and inasmuch
as Pittsburgh had been in the League for many years and had not
been selected as a c onvention site for many, many years it was the
sentime nt of our League that Pittsburgh ,be given the preference.
Another matter which influenced the selection of Pittsburgh
was the indication that the minor league convention would be held
in Columbus, Ohio in 1966 and we try and meet in a major l e ague
city as near the site of the minor l eague convention as appears
practicable.
I hope to get to Atlanta sometime this spring to see the
beautiful new s tadium you are c onstructing and which I am happy
t o know will be the hom e of the Braves in 1966.
Sincere ly yours,
/7
~ a~_,e,.C.-- ~l,/
Warren C. Gil es
President
WCG/akm
L
I
l
�CLARK COLLEGE
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
C O PY
C O PY
Octobe r 16, 1964
2:25 p. m.
TELEGRAM
Mr . Wil liam c. Bart holomay
Milwaukee Braves Baseball Team
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
ATLANTA POTENTIALLY GREAT CITY FOR PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL. TREMENDOUS NEW
STADIUM UNDER CONSTRUCTION. GROWING POPULATION NOW OVER MILLION. PROSPEROUS BUSINESS ENTERPRISES, BOOMING ECONOMIC AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
ALONG WITH GREAT LOVE OF SPORTS ASSURE ENTHUSIASTIC SUPPORT AND FINANCIAL
SUCCESS. HOPE MILWAUKEE BRAVES WILL MAKE ATLANTA NEW HOME.
James P. Brawley
President, Clark College
Atlanta, Georgia
�News Release
IVAN
ALL E N ,
M ayo r
For further information call -
Ja
2 - 4463
of Atlanta
Mrs. A nn Drummond
E x e cutive Secretary
October 20, 1964
FOR USE UPON RECEIPT
STATEMENT BY IVAN ALLEN., JR 91 MAYOR OF ATLANTA
The Braves are to be congratulated on making a brave decision • • •
to petition the National League to move their franchis e to Atlanta,
They have chosen to make the
11
national pastime" truly national,
to give the 24 million people who live in thes e seven Southe aste rn States a
share in the major leagues.
The people of Atlanta, with t heir courage in building an $18, 000 , 000.
S t a diu m to att r act a major league team are also to be congratulate d.
They
re p res ent the n e w, dynamic south, which is no longer willing to b e side- lined
on the back benches .
Our Stadium is a s outhe rn pr oject, built on souther n soil, with
s ou th ern money, by southe rn a rchitects and c ontracto rs.
We feel it i s uniquely fitting that t his decision ha s been made t oday,
a date which marks alm ost e x actly .the centennial of the day when A tlanta
was left a n a s h s trewn ruin , sym bol of a re gion 's d efe a t.
Today we welcome t h e opportunity to become a s ymbol of southern
zest and drive, a major lea gue city, a major le a gue state, in a major league
regiono
- 30 -
JR .
�TELEGRAMS TO:
MR. WILLIAM C. BARTHOLOMAY
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRAVES, INC.
2 NOR TH RIVERSIDE PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
�THE GREAT MET ROPOLITAN ATLANTA AREA WOULD LIKE TO WELCOME
YOUR FINE BALL CLUB HERE ST AR TING NEXT YEAR. EXCELLENT SUPPORT WILL
BE YOURS IN 1965 AND FUTURE YEARS.
IDPLEDGE MY PERSONAL EFFORTS
FOR .ATTENDANCE SUCCESS.
CHARLES HENSON,
TAX ASSESSOR
CITY OF ATLANTA
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I J OIN THOUSANDS OF OTHER BASEBALL ENTHUSIASTS OF THIS CITY IN
URGING YOU TO BRING tHE M I LWAUKEE B!tAVES TO .ATLANTA. A WARM
WELCOME AND OUR SUPPORT AWAIT THEM.
CHIEF C. H . HlLDEBRJIIII)
ATLANTA FIRE DEPARTMENT
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WITH SIX MILLION OF YOUR POTENTIAL FANS USINO THE ATLANI' A AIRPORT
THIS YEAR, WE EXPRE SOUR FERVENT HOPE TH.AT YOU WILL TAKE THE
NECESSARY STEPS TO BRING THE BR.AVES TO .ATL.ANT
AND MAKE THIS
POTENTIALITY A REALITY.
GRADY H. RlDOEW AY, GEN RAL ANAO R
THE .ATLANTA MUNICIPAL AIRPO T
•
�MY OPINION IS THAT NO CITY IN THE COUNTRY WOULD SUPPORT THE
BRAVES LIKE AT LANTA.
COME ON DOWN, WE NEED YOU.
ERNEST J . BREWER
PURCHASING AGENT
CITY OF ATLANTA
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . . .. . .... . . ..
NOT ONLY ATLANTA BASEBALL FANS BUT ALSO THOSE FROM THBOUGHOUT
THE ENTIRE SOUTHEAST ARE ANXIOUS TO HA VE A MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
TEAM IN OUR OWN SECTION THAT WE CAN SUPPORT. WE TRUST THAT THE
MILWAUKEE BRAVES WILL BE THAT TEAM.
C.ARL T . SUTHERLAND
PERSONNEL DIRECTOR
Cl TY OF ATL.ANT A
...............
COME ON BRAVES.
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COME TO ATLANTA WHERE PROGRESS IS A HABIT
ND OUR
PEOPLE WAIT WI TH OPEN ARMS.
J. HOW ARD MONROE
Cl TY HALL UPERINTENDENT
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IT TO MOVE BR.AVES TO ATLANTA NEXT Y A • EXCELL NT
.ATTENDANCE A SURED.
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�ATLANTA BRAVES FANS ARE EAGERLY AWAITING YOUR FAVORABLE
DECISION TO GIVE ATLANTA BIG LEAGUE BASEBALL.
JUDGE HERSCHEL COLE
TRAFFIC COURT
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ATLANTA IS THE HUB OF THE SOUTHEAST.
WOULD WELCOME THE BRAVES.
ITS CITIZENS LOVE SPORTS AND
COME TO .ATLANTA AND WE ' LL BACK "iOU
TO THE HILT.
S. W. GRAYDON
SANITARY ENGINEER
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ACCORDING TO NEWS REPORTS, THERE IS A POSSIBILITY THAT THE BP.AVES
MIGHT MOVE TO ATLANTA.
THIS IS WONDERFUL NEWS AS A DYNAMIC TE.AM
SUCH AS THE BRAVES COULD NOT FIND A ClTY AS DYNAMIC AND SPORTS ..
MINDED AS ATLANTA.
!HEREBY MAKE A STRONO PERSONAL PEEA URO~Ci
THE BRAVE MOVE TO ATLANTA.
PAUL B. IVEY
LAND AGENT
CITY OJr ATLANTA
�THE BR.AVES' FANS Wll.,L HAVE A NEW FREEWAY SYSTEM OF SIX lNTERSTATE
HIGHWAYS PLUS .A NEW MAJOR THOROUGHFARE SYSTEM TO BRING THEM TO
SEE ALL HOME GAMES IN THE NEW ATLANTA STADIUM. WE liYlLL WELCOME
YOU TO ATLANTA • .
KARL A . VBEVINS
CITY TRAFFIC ENGINEER
CITY OF ATLANTA
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EARNESTLY URGE YOUR FAVORABLE CONSIDERATION OF AN OPPORTUNITY
TO ESTABLISH A TRULY GREAT TEAM IN A MOST PROMISlNG GEOGRAPHICAL
AREA .
HOMER W. TOWNSEND
SUPERINTENDENT
MOTOR TRANSPORT DEPARTMENT
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THE BRAVES WILL HAVE IN ATL.ANT .A, AMONG OTHER NUMEROUS ADV.ANT AGES,
THE BEST POLICE DEPARTMENT IN THE NATION AT THEIR DI POSAL.
WE
URGE YOUR EVERY CONSIDERATION OF OUR OFFER.
CHlEF HERBERT T • .JENKINS
ATLANTA POLICED
ARTMENT
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�ATLANTA IS BIG LEAGUE IN EVERY WAY .
JACK C . DELIUS
GENERAL MANAGER
CITY OF ATLANTA PARKS AND RECREATION
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ATLANTA IS THE GREATEST SPORTS CITY IN THE ENTIRE SOUTHEAST AND
A MAJOR L E.AGUE BASEBALL TEAM WOULD BE ANOTHER GREAT .ASSET TO
nus WO NDERFUL
CITY.
I AM QUITE SURE THAT THE PEOPLE OF ATLANTA
WILL SUPPORT A TEAM LIKE THE MILWAUKEE BRA VES, AND I WILL
PERSON.ALLY GI VE THEM ALL THE SUPPORT I POSSmL Y CAN.
CHARLES L . MATHEWS
MUNICIPAL REVENUE COLLECTOR
CITY OF ATLANTA
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ATLANTA NEEDS BlG LEAGUE TE.AM FOR A B IO LEAGUE TOWN ..... URGE
THAT YOU BRING BRAVES TO ATLANTA;
ALDERMAN Eo GREGO Y OlUGG
CITY OF ATLANTA
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NO Cl TY IN AMEl\ICA CAN MATCH ATLANi:t'A'
DYNAMIC OROWTH AND
ENTHUSIASM ...... NOR PRO VI DE A BETTER HOME FOR THE BRAVE •
.ALDERMAN J. M. FLANIG N
Cl TY O .ATL.ANT A
�CONSTRUCTION OF NEW STADIUM IN RECORD TIME INIIICATES
I NT ERE ST IN MAJOR LE.AGUE BASEBALL .
ATLANTA'
SUCH INTEREST WILL ASSURE
SUCCESS FOR THE BRAVES IN OUR CITY.
ALDERMAN CHARLIE LEFTWICH
CITY OF ATLANTA
THE BUILDING OF ATLANTA NOW AND IN THE FUTURE ts MY JOB AND MAIN
CONCERN.
l POINT WITH PRIDE TO OUR RECORD OF UNSURPASSED GROW1'RH
THIS YEAR.
WE ARE A GROWINQ ENTHUSIASTIC .AND BR.AVE CITY,. AND IT
WOULD BE OUR PLEASHRE TO HAVE THE BRAVES J'OIN US IN OUR ORE.AT FUTURE.
W. R . WOFFORD
B UILDINO OFFI Cl.AL
Cl TY OF ATLANTA
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WE KNOW OF NO MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CLUB WE WOULD RATHER HAVE
IN ATIA NTA THAN THE MILWAUKEE BRAVES AND UR.GE YOUR FAVORABLE
CONSIDERATION. WE PLEDOE OUR FULL SUPPORT.
J. J. LITTLE
CITY CLERK
CI TY OF ATLANTA
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ENTHUSl.AM FOR MAJOR LE.AGUE BASE .ALL I
WE A E READY TO UPl?O T THE BR.AVES.
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AT A PEAK lN ATLANTA ... ~ ..
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�Mr. William C. Bartholomay
. 2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
We want to urge your acceptance of the invitation to bring the Milwaukee
B:raves to Atlanta next yea:r.
Alderman Milton G. Farrif.J
Atlanta, Georgia
-···---------··---·-------------~-----·-------~~-~•~-·-------···-~Mr. William C. Bartholomay
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, lllinol
It ie a ple sure to join with citizens from throughout thi atate and
particulat-ly thos in Atlanta to extend a warm invil tion ia mak thi
your home ,ad to be a. pa.rt of gre t and growin m jor part 0£
tomorrowj'a aport world.
Sam Ma sell, Jr., Vice Mayor
City of Atl nt
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Mr. William C. B rtbol a>. y
Z North Riv r lde Pla~a
Chica o, llllnoia
Atla ta w lcome the opp rtunity to ho•t your dl•tlllaui• d
a ball t am.
W h · :v
modern phy1ical 1tadlwn. Our gov rnrn t ls rec ptlve t
o:rt1 proaram. Our cltt na and nel n ot• provide an ideal
e c foi- profe alo 1 baseball.
P ul Web, G n r l Ma
Atl nt Water W l'ka
a•r
�M:r. William C. Bartholomay
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chic go, Illinois
I urge your a·c ce
nee of Atlanta' offe..- to bring the Br ve t o Atlanta.
This will be a tremendous boo tin the arm to the spc,tting world nd the
entire outheast.
Alderm n Douglas L. Fowlke
City of Atlantia
�Cabl e A ddress ,
Royal Crown Cola Co.
COLUMBUS , GEORGIA
December 1, 19 64
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
I want to thank you for the time and courtesies shown to Al
Roach and myself this past week in your office. It was a
pleasure meeting you after knowing of you for so many years
through Ian Stalker. We were raised in the same neighborhood.
Again, I would like to congratulate you, Mayor Allen, on
making an outstanding contribution to Atlanta, Georgia, and
the Southeast, by bringing the Milwaukee Braves to Atlanta.
All of us will benefit from your efforts.
We, of the Royal Crown Cola Co., as I stated in your office,
stand ready to do what we can to insure the success of major
league baseball and football. We hope you will convey this
interest to the Atlanta Braves. They will really belong to all
Georgians almost as much as to Atlanta!
Another point I would like to reiterate , Mayor Allen , is our
desire as a Georgia company , to sell our products in our
capitol city on a non-ex clusive basis . We only want the
opportunity to have our product s available along wit h other
Georgia companies. You have indicat ed this opportunity is
available t hrough the Braves , so we will pursue t his course .
ROYAL CROWN COLA
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NEHI
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PAR -T - PAK
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DIET· RITE
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UPPER 10
RO YA LCROWN
�Royal Crown Cola Co .
CON T INUING
A
L E T TER
TO :
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
DA T ED
PAG E
December l , 19 64
Two
Again, let me say it was a pleasure meeting you, and we, in
Columbus I wish you every success, good health, and a happy
holiday season. Kindest personal regards.
Si~c]ly~
Director
Department
JBC:ntg
�December 9, 1964
Mr, William Parr
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
Commerce Building
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Bill:
Relative to sending Christmas gift subscriptions or
the Atlanta Magazine to some or the directors of the
Braves, here are the names:
Mr. William C. Bartholomay
Alexander & Alexander
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chic go, Illinois 60606
Mr. Delbert W. Col man
Seaburg Corp.
1500 North D yton
Chicago, Illinois
Mr. H.M. H rper, Jr.
8200 Lehigh
Morton Grove, Illinois
Mr. W rr
n
H ·11man
Lahm n Broth rs
On Willi rn Stre t
New York 4, N.Y.
Mr. John J. Lou1,
1000 Hill Rod
Winn t , Ill1no1
Mr. John MeHale
P.O. Box 1122
Atlanta, a org1
Mr. Charles W. Olson, III
c.w. Olson & Comp ny
175 w st Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, Ill1no1s
Mr. Pott r Palm r
1310 North Gr enb y Road
Lak For t, Illinois
Mr. Louie P r1n1
Perin1 Corp.
Mont W yt ·
Fr mingh m, M ss.
Jr.
Mr. Ch rl s H. Pr1c
Pric c ndy comp ny
2 W st 39th Str t
n
City, Mi aouri
�( Page 2)
Mr . Thomas A. Reynolds , Jr .
Winston , St rawn , Smith & Patt erson
38 South Dearborn Street
Chicago, I l linois
Ml' . Daniel c. Searle
G.D . Searle & Company
P. O. Box 5110
Chicago 80, I llinois
Mr . Rushton w. Skakel
Great Lakes Carbon Corp .
18 E t 48th Str t
New York 17, N. Y.
Mr. John w. Sullivan
Sk1l Corp.
5033 North Elston Avenue
Chio go, Illinois
I assume thee nam son b
dd d to your 111 111ng 11 t
1n ti
for th J nuary 1a u , Ple s
nd 14 of your
dvi ory Chr1etma c rds to me for the Mayor to· ign nd
nd to th
bov r c1p1 nt ~- nd pleas be ur th
r not duplio ted from your off1c .
You
prino
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Siner ly,
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Tu:! srn y
Jim: 11.e your query AboHt any attitudes I might ha 'JP. t·nGountered about i he
Brave8.
Jn Phoenix T talked with (~:~T!:r ~-~-'~!f: l)c;>_E~--' --~.b~- ~!'.at.:.~~ erllt.or _'.?Ll_h~ll!.J..Y§l:.U\~~-e
S£~t:i. ry_!:l, an~ An'illr: ·~0.1.~\J143.215.248.55L, the HE _?-f _tJw . 1:!i;l,,_Jc;mrp!-!:l, am11t ti~ Brc1ves.
/1..<: a IT\9. ttn r <'f'
fc: d, eve ryh0rly wrrntecl tn t1. l \r to t. rem a bout t,he sj tlla t. j on.
_I have \mown _b o l.li "l"n for a lonF' ti rTf! 1 t' pivc 5 ,:,nnP.l:ir:,rn 1 '.'. t-1·nthf_ir hi.s fjnit Jo b
wlwn 1--e got. Nrt, , ,(' l:i.rh:i.gan Sl-1!.p so T nm cr!rtPin th 11 t t.heir r0111,n·kri we.re
si:1ce1"('. _,
nn'1 nn~ r e .'1.77~· l:, 11r,r.rd cihout 1-.,b~ Bn:11R.s a nJ rr· r· rrnized bR~eb'.lll. arr.' are
n a mr ocl 1, n 11,trt. Ur: 11r::- 1·p s :tr- p·11d1 a ::i pos s ible. Sonneborn 5aid, "Ir,lclg:irn•
'rlfl;).t f e ('li nc ·•, [1 (, - ,:H'"~·- !'1 ' ( Iii '-' l\'.i !' eh .'.\' "1 Hri l..r_•r '.-::·, ,. , ,~ 11,"\Jll? I don't l'eC-1.~l.)
rrust. !-rive I, ,, he ·.-,ith out a j oli af't r> J' 1~c,v , rin·.'. taGeba l l in Milwau l:GP. for
t hir-1,y-sPrn" }T ,1.1' $ ~.:e wnn 't 1-~'l"" : _n, · 1,,;.; m D fl,<,r a yJ:! ;ir."
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c it.-,- c. nrl ,-, ·, n ty r-tif f-i.ci;:i l s , th1~ \.l u ~d1 ·(':-J1: , .0 11111111 n-i ty L~ un i te d in t.h,:-- erfort.
t:,h• f.' r n ves t,hrn 11 :'.h Lh ~ n=-· :<~- ye al'.
to h"n · on tn
T ri.Vn' t 1· nr:" u.nt.c 1· a ::- :i n?lF· rl i L0r jn P~"' •! lli.Y. --- =1rr: t l-c t nri c w~ s we ll
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t en,n, ::: '., e .::..1 iL wa r, t-hr-• t<:• m curru"TJ,··n~i 11;,0d . Thc',V don 't 1il:·i1'1e /\ tl;1~tc'l ~ c:11we
H , a ;ip ..; ~···th"t the l1r rt1.· (.!G ~:e m m i nf· t.. , ;,,o v e s ri 111ror l:1.r' p :i.n::-wa:: , hut t h, ·,v
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TV t..crritr,r ;v , LI-Bt tllf' cw :--:P. r c- h,, r,<1:11r f r i. Ph t r-r, c ··1 •JI' t-lie con:;" 1n cn c':!s a r,rl
s t., ~ k r n·)th -r c lnh i_n W·,t h:in~<'n. Th• ;: .: "?re a n d .rl o f f'.nvs rrn re nt ~dd l i n r .
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pr o f-Q"',, T" f'or a rv era l )•,nr.-: i n t he f1J·t,ure . Tlrn t w:i l l
ci t, i er~ ,1 r h:i n ,y, Vi f.'.'I:~, re::trl;v. Wheth P. r i t, wiU
a f'fec t t r,:-, At 1_;:in t n rno vn , T ,_Jo n' L kn ow . Tod s n:r-:-. t·.11 ,1t, Rfl0 i s n,Jl in a f{P')rl
µos i t.5.rn brc a11De ·cy , P-u t i:-;hu r ~h, and Cl<~ve l ,'.i r~-J e n rt•r ,·t c h on 01Jr TV
t e rritor y, Wn 1 r1 -• .... ___
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exp1:1 n:=-i m
as s i.en t,,)rdLoz·y 1. rrl r_r;i '71?
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ND . lfr• l ol rJ JT)2 1. 1-e 1-. h0 h:1A fl\(Wed h:i f: tam:ily t n T•'l. or-idc1
inn t i Jfl.t 1--e rlc\ G t,"l kf>!1 ,"l !1 a p~ rl Tfl n n t i 11 (_' }1
i Ci-\ I?() W}Y! n: th ri C l11r 1 ha<; ll)Q1Tf' d i tr;
nffices . Hp sni rl , ;i o ki ru· l~, , l,fr • t. h 0 ::n0:-1.ks bal;k t o ~U l wau k e~ nmf1r c r·,ver , f'
dri. rk 11e::;s b ut
J t h in k he ·,.;·•::- 11 !·. t, ~,rjn, r1oro truth Lh 1rn poe t ry .
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Mclla.l ('. s;-i.ys th~ ,- ,le Ilr, 1 k 1s ritizer ·:; (.l ~; i lwn.11 ke c clo n' t care wh,-i, h er ·l, he
\ llravps ~t::iy nr n nt b11L t,h,i I. t.Jic, r n L'il, i c i::irn amcl city fat h ers ::ir~ adamant .•
HfJ sail i.r\3t trlf' TTny0. r of Atlant a (T think lt was trw rnayo r but if n"fi:. thf'
m.'l.:,or SOTll(:' ot,'-x,r hJ !_' h dt _- · ofri.,,lal.) ca1lE1ri the mayor ot' Mllwankee to
,n ·r an ge a quiPt rne eti n1~ :in r,h \.c clfTO t 0 try ani ta1 k t i~ matt er out an::l reach
s omf> conclusions. The Milwauke e may or went to the rot e l wiU1 several ofL, 1 b
lilas not in a c r,mpr0nl.sing mood, He ev?n 8Ummoned the press , a ccnrrl ' nc
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to Jolmiv, and that preolu.ded any ·chanoo of arbitration. MoRale did noli
appear "'r.Y' .oonfid~~ about 001r4Jletil\l the roan fee next •eaeon.
'
SyJ!i)&thetic to ·
Jv p':l r d~rtal feeling is that . tho oporta fan 1a
1ilwau}C&e -whio.h ·me be en a g:re at epOl'te town. The;, broke attendan01 reoorda,
ve~
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a m w .... ota di'9Jl1 won a pennant
rOTerbi.al· bag •
am
n<JW will be left boldifV tbt
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Ao Sonri@borh Ilia.id, ·'Whit n LOll ~~rini brought th!, Brane to MilwaukBe, there wu
still a' bu lxu l ~Qlll lAttt in Bc-, t an. I think tb9n 111 a poaaibility of
gove rnioont int erve nticn into organiJled ball it tbl Bnvw• go along with
a Milwauk a-be-~
d at t 1t \d. •
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a aou.rt teat of t he,
re1ernt olaUllle wbioh keepa
the bill play-er. ~ ·'.eona t bi.ng a.kin to peonage ""f .:
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1n the lid.nor•.
i s te le'rl.eion. Snrl.te quote d a r ~ ure whicll I don't recnll
but it w a ...,'lll)thing llko tlE Yankees ooke
mone1 on te~Tis ion
t han l2 oi.hef lTWljor ~~ Jtgue clubs nake ooll1ng t.ickete • .lm the Yanks,
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of c ou.n. e, keep it :-e,t. It they split the loot like tm pro football
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leagu., 1 tm re vo uJ4foo no Milwmilw e Jroblem.
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~wer~ )"O\ll' qu8-l"l_'•• •••
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WINSTON. STRAWN, SMITH'& PATTERSON
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FIRST NATIONAL BANK BU ILDIN G
EUR Ol' tAN
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CHICAGO 60603
rnro H . DAUC.HE lll y
R . L AWq(N Cr Sl o n MS
THOM .O S A . REY NO LDS . J R .
D"-VIO C KEC;J\N
C'O ~ M . SOWERS
JA WF.5 L . P[PKI NS
f"'\l .<.iAGD l rO O T E
?/\ V il .I H AA OY
FI N ANCIA L 6- 360 0
W I N ~ 1 r>A 'N~. !•/\'"l!-
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IHC.HAnD J BRE'NNAN
M r1NL EY M A X.SO N
,q - i-tuR I GOULD
NO RMAN WA1fE.Jl1
AOPEAT G LANI:'.
D . ~ I D NE Y C'ONU 11
Robert R. Richardsoc, Esq.
Hurt, Hill, Richardson
and Sosebee
William-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
Dear Bob:
This will confirm our conversation in connection
with the acquisition by Milwaukee Braves 9 Inc. of the
Atlanta franchise in the International League.
~he price
for the franchise is $285,000 of which $200,000 is a relocati on expense under the agreement between the Braves
and the Stadium Authority.
This will confi rm our agreement that after the 1965
baseball season is completed, the Braves will pay $50,000
to the Stadium Authority if they determine that they want
to operate the franchise in some location outside of
Atlanta.
The net effect of this transaction will be to
make the cost of the franchise $235,000.
It i s
the Braves
they will
$35,000 of
further understood that at some futu r ·e date i.1
sell this franchise for in excess of $50,000,
credit the Authority with up to the first
such excess.
The purpose of the foregoing unde r s t andings is t o ,
if at all possible, limit the cost of the franchise bo th
to the Braves and the Stadium Authority to $100,000 each.
Sincerely,
-- ?Thomas A. Rey nol d s , Jr.
TAR-Jr : CLO '
n r. -:; ·,. ,,
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December 1, 1964
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C;lA. NC. C Ht, USE n
EDM U ND J. K ENNY
C ALVI N r S llo1°JY1En
J ARDrN l?E'A R 1 C K
RICH AR D J rJ\L El Tl
FAANK 0. K~NH( '
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PAUL T . K ES SL EQ , JR.
CH AA L( S f" MARQUIS
ALEXANOf;h .J MQ :J D Y
BRUCE "1 S M T H
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�LAW OFFICES
HURT, HILL, RICHARDSON AND So SEBEE
WILLIAM-OLIVER BUILDING
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303
C HARLES D . HURT
JAMES C. HILL
ROBERT R . RICHARDSON
HUGH D . SOSEBEE
ROBERT L.TODD
C HARLES D. HURT, JR.
T ELEPHONE
524-7946
December 2, 1964
• Thomas A . Reynolds, Jr .
Winston, Strawn, Smith & Paterson
Attorneys at Low
First National Bank Building
Chica . o, Illinois 60603
Dear Tom:
In today' s maf.l w r c iv your I tt r of O cemb r 1 confirmin agr em nb
between Milwauke Braves, Inc . and th Stadium Authority with r f r nc to acquisition
of the Atlanta franchis • Your I tter r tot the rit r's understanding of the oral
agreem nt you had with Arthur Montgom ry, the Authority Chairman .
Arthur is out of th country, but will b bock in Atlanta a rl y n t w
By copy of this letter, I a m forward ing your I tt r along to him in c
commenb on this ogreem nt os xpr ss
With kindest
rsonal r
h has any
by oxchan e of corr pond nc •
ards, •
or
Cordially,
R R:cg
<:c:
yor
I.I n
k.
�hitney M. Young ·Jr"
Sh,igging N egro outfielder
Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee
Braves, one of the perrenial ter. rors of National League pitchet's, has voiced reserva tions
a bout playing in · Atlanta if
th'at's wher e his ballclub t urns
up next season.
Aa ron, w ho stroked 24 home
-.runs this year, knocked in ~5
runs and belted a r eSP,eotable
.328, is a valued asset t o his employers, who
apparently have wearied of (Milwa ukee even
il their star out,fielder has not.
ow ·he is t orn -b etween his loyalty to the
Braves and his obligations to his fam-i1y.
\He Is wontlerlng aloud about housing . conditions and other opportunities t here. 1 Wo uld
his children a ttend a s egregated · and inferior
school? Would t hey be rebuffed, s nubbed or
scarl'ed psychologically if the Braves play in ·
Georgia ?
"I just •won't step out on the field" if the
club moves there, he told a wire service reporter. "I Jcertainly don't like t he idea· of playing 111 Atlanta and I have no intention of taking my !amily· t here."
• • •
!His absence from t he Braves lineup might
eue the cares of rival National League mana gers 1but it would -be a severe blow to t he·
Braves.
It would also dash the hopes o! Atlanta's
Negro leaders who have worked tirelessly to
bring professlo11al baseball and· football clubs
to Geongla's first city.
_
They've labored in the conviction that integr ated pro teams would dramatically demonstrate what citizens of color can accomplish
given equal opportunlties.
.
It is • their hope that - Aaron's big bat and
superstar pop1,1larity' will help knock J im Crow
out of town.
Atlanta's NAACP Presiden
has writ ten Aaron asking hf
mind and play._
Atlanta, he said, ls a p t'ojpessive, bulffl
city where conditions are ltfll)roving stelldl
for Negroes.
'
Like other Negr.o leaders, Smith knows
tully that Atlanta has its shortcomings. Early
t his year, 54 signed a declaration calling for
impr ovements that would make · direct aot-1011
protests unn ecessa ry. They heeded Rev. Mal'tin i..tither King's warning that time was "running out" for Atlanta if it 41d not make more
rap id strides in race relations;
.
Since then, virtually all ·public· places were
"voluntarily" opened to N eg
-either by the
presence of · pickets, press u
from the Attorney G eneral's office, · pas!ftlte of the Civil
Rig hts Act or q uiet, <but e19ctive negotiati~
by the Urban League.
'
(Mayor I van Allen, who pleaded eloquently
for the Act in Congress, is· regarded as one of
. the Sout h's outstanding progressives w ho has
helped crea te · a· climate in which change can
be made peace~ully.
B ut Atlanta has a long way ·to go in bettering · its schools, housing· and job opportunities
for Negroes. · · ,
F or example, one-half of the city's renlal
·un its occu pied by Negroes· are substandard and
80 percent of the adult population over 25 years
. of a ge holds no high school diploma. .
'
For Aaron, the choice is difficult.
To him, doffing his Mt when the "Star
Spangled Banner" is piped over the loudspeaker
opening day in the city's ne'w $18,000,000 st!l.dium may prove bitter ironr,t It he fears for
t he welfare of his family.
But such a sacriflc is ee.rifestly desired by
Negro leaders who
h
fu l t hat his 'big
bat will help them h
an "Open City,"
one in which opporlllm.tita e translated Into
reality "for all. ··
'
.
.
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November 2 4, 1964
Mr. WhitnE:y M . Young , Jr .
14 East 48th Stree t
New York, New York 100017
Dear Mr. Young :
A friend of mine forwarded me a copy of your
article "Can a Negro Play Ball in Atlanta?" .
I think you have stated the matter very clearly
and I appreciate your careful consi deration of
the problems with which we are confronted.
I had hoped to have an opportunity to see you
last Thursday evening , and reg-ret th t I could
be at the U rban League dinner for such a. brief
period of time.
M r. Howl nd briefed me on your talk and stated
that it was an exc ellent presentation. T he next
time you are in Atlanta, I sincerely hope you will
give me a ring.
With b st wi hes, I
m
Sincerely,
Iv n Allen, Jr.
Mayor
lAJ r :ad
-~
------------
�WILLIAM C. BARTHOLOMAY
Mr.· Bartholomay is Chairman of the Board of the
Milwaukee Braves, Inc.
Prior to this, he served as a Director of
the Chicago White Sox.
Mr. Bartholomay is also a Vice President
of Alexander & Alexander, Inc., an international brokerage firm.
He is a lif'e and qualifying member of the Million Dollar Round
Table of the National Association of Life Underwriters which is
the highest distinction offered in the life insurance industry.
Mr. Bartholomay is President of Surprise, Inc.,
which company operates retail toy stores in the Chicago area.
He
is also a Director of many companies and charitable institutions.
Mr. Bartholomay holds a Bachelor of Arts degree
from Lake Forest College and he also attended the Northwestern
University Graduate School of Business Administration.
�THOMAS A. REYNOLDS, JR.
Mr. Reynolds is Executive Vice President of the Milwaukee
Braves, Inc.
White Sox.
Prior to this, he served as a Director of the Chicago
He is also a partner in Winston, Strawn, Smith and
Patterson, a law fi:nn located in Chicago, Illinois.
Mr. Reynolds is a graduate of Georgetown University,
Washington, D.C.
He received his LL.B. in 1951 from the University
of Michigan Law School.
He is a member of Phi Delta Phi Fraternity.
He specializes in trial practice and corporate finance.
Mr. Reynolds has been Park Commissioner of Northfield,
Illinois, from 1959 until the present.
He is also a director of
many companies and participates in many functions for charity.
He is an excellent golfer.
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PRESIDENT ·. : .: , ·
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; ., .JOHN MCHALE
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John 'M~Hale·, to l)araphrase a.' .·certatn :presld~ntlal s'a ytng,· .ta.Ikd'
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sof'tly and' ·.swings
a· big
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f'ul bats of the .Mllwa:ukee ,Braves. ·· . A ·nattve of Detroit; he Jotned the :,.'
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. Braves . orga.nlzatlon .
25, 1959.
as
Vice President and . General Manager'
In September of 1961; he became President
of
on .January : : ,
the Milwaukee
club. ·
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Stnce hls high. school days, . J_ohn has rarely been far from a field
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at Notre Dame.
In...1-960-; he was a monogram winner at South Bend,
I
playing center for the
11
Irlsh" on the football team.
World War II
. neccessltated movtng hts field to other areas, and he chose the Navy .
McHale could undoubtedly write a book about basebali --lf he could .
take that much
11
tlme out" from baseball.
Hls complete dedication to
the game dates back some 23 years• beglnnlng when he joined the Detroit ·
Tigers as a player 1n their sy-stem 1n 1941.
He played with the Club
1n the World Serles 1n 1945, and continued as a member . ot the team
throUgh 1948.
Tlgertown, 1n Lakeland, · Florida, owes lts origin to McHale'a
efforts when ·he became Farm Director ln 1953.
The Florida camp ls .
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the ' tralnlng ground for prospects'
,
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are P':oducts: o_f thls · _s yste~~ - · Itnmeldately prlor _t~·;movlng
·· Detroit_-~·o,s ;_~ r
..•· to Mllwawcee
an:d ' most ot ~the players now
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. now ...realde in. Elm Grove, "Wlscons1n. · Their six sons and d~ughters,
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If
the proverbial throe wi::ihoo wore E;Te.."'lt o d h!m • ho'd p r ob~b ly d!_vld~ thom
between a.."'lothor pennant ~or the Bra.vos, c~pactty- crowd o ~or Mll w a uk oe
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CoWlty Stadium, and more, time to spend wlth his tnterestil\g -f amily.
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the Wlsconsln Club.
.An · articulate and · energetic guest-speaker, ·
he ~anages to fill most of the- dem_ands for personal appearances• .,. :- :
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but he hasn't been getting around to It much;
la.telyt 11
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Ootrolc , ~:tchtca.n , So;,toobc-r 15, 1921)
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�PEACHTREE
' 6 0 ' WEST PEAC' tTREE ST
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_AN-.-A 9
GA
December 16, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor:
If you haven't already seen it, you will get a
kick out of this newspaper article.
Best wishes for the holidays.
Cordially yours,
~
iot Heald
General Manager
WSB-TV
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Enclosure
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NINETEENTH
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• MILWAUKEE
RICHARD D . FOERSTE R
(i.,,oral Sale, Ma=9•r
3, WISCONSIN ,
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December 11, ·1964
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NORTH:
Mr. Don Elliot Heald
General Man_a ger
.WSB-TV
.1601 West Peachtree Street, NE
Atlanta 9, Georgia
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Dear Don:
Thanks much for the Atlanta· Braves bumper sticker. We
could use another 757 additional copies to place on
the city dump trucks. If you can comply, please mail
in care of this station and bill Alderman Grobschmidt.
'
Incidentally, Don, we are under the impression that the
name of the team has been changed to the Atlanta Carpetbaggers ••• so maybe you better put your typesetters to
work.
One final thought • • • to give you an idea of how happy
we are about the whole situatiqn, attached is a qui-p
from the Sports Edi tor of the MILWAUKEE JOURNAL, which
I think your · gang mi ght appreciate. As a matt er of f act,
I will fo rgive you if you and your associates just continue to wor k hard so that Cox Broadcasting stock goes
over 32-7/8 on the big board!
·
Best re gards.
Cordi a lly,
RDF/ v
Attach.
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8 11 OLIVER E. KUECH!..E, Sport• Edi:or .
Why Not a Festival Instead of Dinner? ·
ting SINCE the baseball writers' apnual dinrier· f~r fa·ns ·in ·Janhow I ,
uary r:i.ay be the . last here for some. time, it· might not
. '.~;~ a~1 o,e a ?ad 10~a to do_ s.omething special-even get' away from
iit _4oo. tne chnn er idea entirely and into something like a friendly
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the little· fos tival with "booths." The ,----~=--------=-1
n , too idea does have poss~bilities, and -25c a· fistful. But .only' one
,; · -:
if . the Braves \\·ould only co.. fistfµl a~ a time. -Jt \.Vouldn't
-; -.-. - . operate in a last gesture of fare- n_ecessar~ly have to be me, I · · well, _everybody would have a ~ gue, ~1ther. Custard w~1uld
C.. S good time. Atlanta mi <>ht even ~nythmg soft and flu1,y, ror
.
.
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this wouJd· be all in fun and in
seo<l_ ~p. Mayot Ivan _Allen , to the friendly spirit of the festi·
,. · . part,c1pa ,e.
val.
.
· ·
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' nd'e r1cc_
th' A booth, · R,eynolds Rear,"
1k Bolling
ar O omay S a
would have fine possibilities. It ra
Qian _c:nd T HERE co u 1 d be a . water would be something like · the ..
. : _o f i the
dunking booth, foe instance, "pi'.1 the. ta!! , on . the _donkey" fi~
ednesday which · might be', co.lled "Bar- which blmd,o.ded . c h 1 Id re n mi
situation tholomav's Batli." Bill would play. Tom could ft)! the role_of ov,
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donkey. Three tails and pms
t season be perched on a chair above a -hat p·ns-c •Id b
Id f . t~E
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se effect tank of _ice cold water. with the 5oc.
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chair so 'triggered it would
.
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in Mil- d ump him into t he tank whenTroubadou~
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ever a small target was proper- .
in.
o~t this ly hit. Ice could be /dumped
LITILE: side attractio~s, go
right to into the wa ter periodically to be
Don Davidson, dressed like th.
,d. · " I'm sure the water was cold. Fans a troubadour and leading his po
' have a would pay 25c for three balls. two pooches which now answer ut(
1em out A fraternity paddling booth to the names of "Coca" 1and -;-:
te's a lot could be set up with a certain "Cola," could wa nd er through
bound t o d .
. d' F 25
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the c r o w d and occasionally
.yers but :~ui1~ 143.215.248.55 ~ne 0 lha~ke~~itli a~ ? reak into his skateless skatbascball. wooden paddle at' tl1e posterior rng ac_t.
e r s are of Mayor Allen of Atlanta. Ernie Johnson could imper·
··" · ters, yet "Ivan the Terrible" the booth senate Warren Giles and with
• take it could be called.
. ,
map and pointer explain how
s got to There could be a booth known the distance between Milwa uyself · al- as "McHale's Meringue." John kee and ~ inneapolis is really the fans would stick his head through a only 240 mik,s, not 345, and the .
1d InakeiI'lOie in a sheet of canvas .and distance between , Milwaukee
better." try t o duck fistfuls of meringue and Chicago is r e a 11 y only
80, not 95.
Earl Yerxa could pass out old
Braves programs _ free _ and
___!l\ _ A71ttJin _ ~ b.' ' when things got a little d ull 1
_ c;
Austin Brown could shoot off ,•
,
those t iny lady crackers. John
chool un- Mullen could sing "Hello, Dolly"
ime head wi th Bobby Br.a gan on the oboe.
Riverside Such a festival in nlace of a 'i
next 10 dinner WOUid serve several pur- C
i ms won poses. It would ra ise the money 'n
•nference to enable the baseball writers .
· In win- here to continue their scholar- F.
les, his sliip fund . .In fact, it might raise . c.
31 game enough money to let t11e writers
buy a college. It would give ff
baseball ians here an outlet for P;
·. f t their frustro.tions. And it would,
00 · as mentioned, allow the Chicago
t cafi'e owners to make a worth while
'.idwe~~ parting gesture t o the city they _
.
have
treated
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�LAW OFFICES
HATCHER.MEYERSON, OXFORD
HENRY M. HATCHER. JR.
AND
fRVIN
THIRD FLOOR, FIR.ST FEDERAL BUILDING
STAN LEY P. MEYER.5ON
40 MARI ETTA SfREET. N.\'((
CLIFFORD OXFORD
ATLANTA.GEORGIA 30303
' BENNY L.IRVIN
525 - 3404
PAUL E. PRESSLEY
ELLIS C. HOOPER
November 13, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor, City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I want to congratulate you on procuring the Milwaukee Braves
for 1966. The delay of one year should not be harmful, but actually
should enable us to get a better start in presenting a good front
during that season.
In view of the fact that Legion Field in Birmingham has now been
enlarged to 69,000 and has neither college football, professional
football, or baseball in it does indicate the great need for a major
stadium in a city of our size.
I think it is wonderful that you have
provided this leadership for an installation that never would have
been built under the administration of your predecessor.
I sincerely hope that the team will be successful in Atlanta and
that we will ultimately procure a Major League football franchise.
With kind regards, I am
yours,
Clifford Oxford
CO/bjm
cc:
Mr. Arthur Montgomery
�waga-tv
channel
10 18
CBS Television in Atlanta
5
November 16, 1964
W. PEACHTRE E ST.,N . W.
BO X 4 2 07
HORACE W. RAY.
GENE RAL M ANAG ER
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor o f Atlanta
Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
Thank you so much for inviting me to join you
last Thursday for the informal get-together
to meet the Braves officials.
As you know, we have been more than an enthusiastic booster to have the Braves come
to Atlanta. We are behind you and Arthur
Mont g omery, and y ou c a n count on our cont i nued
s o l id s up port.
Kind est personal r e gard s .
Cordia l ly ,
,L
Buddy Ray
BR: jv
... a service of the Storer Broadcasting Company
ATLANTA 2. GA .
TE L . 875 - 555 1
�287 SPRI NGDALE DR I VE , N.E.
ATLA NTA 5 . GEOR GIA
TEL. 2 33 -488 0 -
H . L . WILSON
Motion
Picture
No ve mber 10, 1964
Mayor Iva n Allen J r.,
City Hall
Atlant a - HOME OF THE BRAVE S
Dear Mr . Mayor:
More powe r to yo u , Arthur Mont gomery, Mill s B. La ne,
a nd all ot hers who had a hand in t h e bi g try.
More
power also t o the owne r s of the Br a ves for thei r own
brave stand .
I bel i e ve the y act e d i n good f aith.
Granted that I am sometimes gullible , but I hope I ' m
not naive .
Anyway I ' ll ride with this throw.
Hell, we only got knocked down -- not out.
Let's dust
off t he knees of our blue jeans and get back with it.
Okay , BRAVE men?
Yours for the iWorld
Series in
AS S I GNMENTS
ANYWH ERE
IN
THE
FREE
WO RLD
289 - 2162
Writer
�November 25, 1964
Mr . J. O . Moore
Atlanta Georgia Labor Council AFL-CIO
250 Tenth Street, N . E .
Atlanta , Georgia
De r Jim:
Thank you very much for your kind letter of November
18th concerning the move of :ma,jor league base ·11 to
Atlanta and the building of our new Stadium.
l am mo t rateful for your support and ppreci t
your kind expre ions. Working together e re going
to build a greater Atlant
nd that i
bat is important
to all of us .
Sincerely yours,
Iv All n, Jr.,
M yor
lAJr./br
�November 24, 1964
Mr . Cary B . Wilmer, Jr.
235 The Prado, N. E.
A tlanta 9, Georgia
Dear Cary:
Thank you very much for sending me the sports
column from the Tampa Tribune.
I hope you have had an opportunity to look at the
Stadium. as it is tl'uly a magnificent structure.
With best wishes, 1 am
Sincerely yours,
Ivan Allen, Jr.,
Mayor
IAJr/br
�November 25, 1964
• L . L . Jackson
1392 LaVista Road, N . E .
Atlanta, Geo-rgia 30324
Dear Mr. Jackson:
l appreciate your lett r of November 16th wbieh yo
wrote me while you were in Tifton, Georgia about
major league baseball coming to Atlanta.
I am mo t grateful for your kind rem.ar
nd hope
yo.u will have an opportunity to see many of the g
which will be played in our
ond~rful St dium.
Sincerely your ,
Ivan Allen, ,r.,
Mayor
LUr/br
e
�November Z5, 1964
Mr. Al Purc ell
53 Jefferson Street
Newnan, Georgia
Dear Mr. Purcell:
I certainly appreciate your nic e letter of November
16th about major league b seball coming to Atlanta.
We certainly have a magnificent Stadium and I ho
you will be ble to come up from Nunan often to e
the games.
With b st wi hes, I am
Sincer ly your ,
Ivan Allen, Jr .,
yor
lAJr:/br
�November 17., 1964
Mr . William C . Burnett
General Engineering Training Supervisor
Southez:n B-ell Telephone and Telegraph COlllpany
Hu.rt Building
Atlanta. GeoTgia 30303
Dear Mr . Burnett:
I certainly appreciate your very kind letter' of Nov..ember
13 and your strong support of the act.ton that has. been
taken to bring major league sports to Atlanta.
We h ve certainly not given up hope of having major
le gue ba eh.all in 1965 but. in any event,, for the first
time in Atl .ta' hi tory we will have them jor'
in 1966.
Ivan All n, Jr.
�NEW YORK WORLD TELEGRAM - November 5, 1964
�TELEPHONE 414 Di visi on 4-7000
2611 WEST WISCONSIN AVENUE • MILW~ U
MILWAU K EE , WISCONSIN, 53233
E X ECU TIVE OFFIGE
,
E.E,;
(_
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143.215.248.55
November 19 , 1964
Mrs . Ann Drummond
Administrati ve Ass i stant t o the Mayor
Ci ty Hall
At lant a, Georgia
Dear Ann:
I t certainly was pleasant talking with you yesterday and I was
hopeful that Bob Maercklein could be hel pful in some way . Bob
handles our advertising and publ ic r elati ons and is a good personal f r i end of mine. He comes from an old Milwaukee f ami l y of
high standing, and his uncle i s a former Governor of Wisconsin .
Frankl y, having lived here nine mont hs, I am convinced that t his
Brave s issue is one now of county polit ics and I feel there i s
l ittle hope of changi ng the county officials minds. They have
made such an i ssue of this wh ole Braves deal t hat they are afraid
that any concession t o Atl anta would assure t heir future pol itical
defeat . The attitude even among some business men is, make them
play here and refuse to support them .
I am afraid it would be unwise f or Atlant a to make any further
direct efforts to solicit assistance from the local officials.
The newspapers of course enjoy blowing the whol e thing out of
proportion .
Please give my best to Mayor Allen and if there is any change
in the situation or any new thoughts I will get in touch with
you.
LSF/cw
HILTON INNS IN ATLAN TA • AU RORA , ILL . • EL PASO • KANSAS CITY , MO . • MILWAUKEE
NEW ORLEANS • SAN FRANCISCO • SEATTLE • TARRYTOWN , N . Y .
�CHANNEL
WSB·TV
NEWS
RELEASE
An Official Editorial of WSB-TV,
THE HYPHENATED BRAVES
Atlanta, Georgia
November 9, 1964
The future of the Milwaukee Braves seems to be settled. They'll
play one more year in Milwaukee, then they'll move to Atlanta for
the 1 66 season.
Some local fans are understandably disappointed that there will be
no big league baseball here next year, and in case they're inclined
to go scapegoating we suggest they shy away from Mayor Allen.
The Mayor made some bright promises based on his confidence in Atlanta.
Allen said he could deliver big league baseball to our town, and he
was right. He was simply a year early due to unforeseen legal
complications. And if we hadn't built the stadium we wouldn't even
have a team for 1966 .
The attitude of Milwaukee officials seems curious. Of course, they're
unhappy about losing the Braves. But it's sort of like a man telling
his wife .... "In one year I'm going to divorce you and I've already
got your replacement picked out.
In the meantime, I e x pect you to be
I
the same sort of wife you ve always been ".
It just won I t work.
Milwaukee officials have delayed the inevitable one year, and it
profits them very little. Next year they ' ll have a hyphenated team
perhaps the sports writers will call them the Milwaukee dash Atlanta
Braves .
So n ow the political barrage against Mayo r Allen may begin . We ho pe
not . Atlanta has waited 70 yea r s for a majo r league team , and one
mo r e yea r i s n' t u nreasonable. Allen did eve ry thi ng in his powe r to
get t h e Braves fo r 1965 . A written contrac t to that e ff ect would
h a ve made no d i fferen c e. Th e Braves we r e obligated to pla y i n /
Milwaukee n e x t yea r. It was hoped that the team c o u ld s imp ly pay off
the r e nt o n Milwauk ee Co unt y S t a d ium a nd mo v e , but legal actio h
blo cked that.
I
So for one year Atlanta may have a vacant stadium. Fo r at least 25
years thereafter, Atlanta will have big league baseball .. • •••. that
leaves l i ttle room for c omplaint .
�November 16, 1964
Mr. Samuel L . Eplan
Attorney at Law
1017 William-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
De r Sam:
I appreciate your letter of November 10th regarding
the 1965 pl ying season at the stadium.
The uggestion you made is being pur ued, and I
certainly hope we will have full 1965 baseb 11
s ason.
Sincerely,
Ivan Allen, Jr.
IA.Jr . . bea
�MU . 8·8365
S AMUEL L. EPLA N
ATTORN EY AT LAW
1017 WILLIAM-OLIVER
BUILDING
ATLANTA, G E ORGIA 30303
November 10, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Mayor:
'!1here has been occasions in the past when big
league teams have played some of their games away from
their home grounds.
I wonder if it would be possible for each team
in the National League to agree to play four of its home
games in the Atlanta Stadium. Five would be better, but
I am using four for conveniency.
'!1hen, we could get sufficient public spirited
citizens to buy sufficient tickets to the games to
guarantee an attendance of not less than 30,000.
I am sure that a plan of this kind has crossed
your mind, but if it hasn't, it might be worth considering.
With kindest personal regards, I am
Sinc ~
urs,
Samuel L . Eplan
SLE/mgj
�November 16, 1964
Mr. Benard South
33Z Piedtnont Avenue, N. E.
Atlanta. Georgia
Dear Mr. South:
Thanks very much for your nice letter regarding the
Braves and our new Stadium.
I am certainly glad you share rny enthusiasm and
just hope that we will have baseball next spring.
With kind regards, I am
Sincerely,
Ivan Allen, Jr.
lAJr .. be
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BENARD
SouTH
1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
332 PIEDMONT AVENUE, N . E .
ATLANTA 12, GEORGIA,U . S . A.
PHONE JA4-2026
DISTRIBUTOR
BEARINGS & TRUCK EQUIPME N T
November 11th, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr .
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Ivan:
I want to congratul ate y ou on the c losing
of t he contr act to bring Major Leagu e Baseb all to Atlanta
to be played in the new stadium you have champ ione d all
t hese months . Yours has been a worthy t a sk and I am
c er t a in that history will prove this to b e one of the
fin e st steps forwar d that Atlanta has ever und er taken.
It n as been my pleasure to view ALL of the
l arges t stadiums i n America a nd quit e a few overseas .
One day I read a list of all t he l arges t stadiums in
America with the c apa city of each listed . I ha d been
in all of them fr om the Rose Bowl in Pa sadena to the
Yale Bowl i n New Haven a nd includ ing the Sesqui-Centennial
Stadium in Phila de l phia , Soldi ers Field a t Chi cago,
Orange Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Los Angeles Co liseum, Univ oof
California at Berkeley, California. I have witnessed
Maj or League Baseball games in 95% of all t he National
Leagu e and Amer i c an League baseba ll parks i nclu ding the
Milwaukee park a nd my exper ienc e le ads to· the conclus i on
that the good that will come to Atlant a in the building
of the new and modern stadium is incalculable.
I peddled Coca- Colas in Ponce de Leon park in
1919 and made the handsome sum of $J . 65 on the l as t day
of the season when the Cr ackers defeated New Orleans in
a battle for t h e pennant before some 13,000 fans. Most
of this profit c ame from selling Coca-Cola bottle crates
for the rightfield standees aft er we sold out of cold
drinks. I menti on these things t o indicate that I am
really not a novice when a discussion ar ises conc erning
the subject matter. I was present the day Arthur Montgomery
presen ted the Stadium plan to the Board of Aldermen when
the general public was invited. Mr.Montgomery made as
fine a presentation on a subject as I have ever heard.
The two of you have aone something f or Atlanta of which
you can well be proud!
Copies to: Mr.Arthur Montgomery
Judge James C.Davis, Atlanta Times
�It 1 s Quite a City - - - - WELCOME TO ATLANTA
If you are new to the Atlanta School System, please regard this as a
warm and cordial welcome not only to th.e Sys tern but to Atlanta itself.
Y-0u have joined one of the finest educational teams in the nation.
Your talents, efforts and creativity are needed to help make it the
best in the nation.
Perhaps you will not feel that we are immodest when we point out that
although Atlanta is twenty~fourth in the nation in population, it has
the fifth busiest airport, nineteen degree-granting colleges and
universities, several local theatre groups, a choral guild, a symphony
orchestra, music club, art museum, two ballet companies, and a concert
dance group.
Geographically, our city has the largest toll-free telephone system in
the nation. It has been called the City of Churches. We have 600
churches representing 40 denominations. Three commercial television
stations bring the three national TV networks to our city. The Atlanta
Board of Education owns WETV, the only educational television station
in the city. There are twenty commercial AM and FM radio stations in
metropolitan Atlanta and the Atlanta Buard of Education owns WABE, the
only educational radio station in the state. We have 159 parks and
recreational areas and in October when the freeway connector is completed in the center of town, you will be able to ride 40 miles south
and 40 miles north without encountering a stop sign.
Thirty thousand shops, stores and service organizations are within the
city limits for your convenience. ']:he city has more than 40 motion
picture theatres. There aTe 19 general hospitals and 10 special hospitals in metropolitan Atlanta.
Atlanta recently completed a twenty million dollar jet air terminal
that serves seven airlines with 465 planes arriving and departing
daily. And you may be interested to know that Atlanta is only two
hours by air from two-thirds of t he nation's population. A librar y
system, including a main library and 15 branches, will serve you.
Building goes a-pace on a new stadium and Atlanta expects in the very
near future to have a new auditorium. On the drawing board is the
Memorial Cultural Center that will enhance the cuitural life of metropolitan Atlanta and, indeed, the state. Also a six million dollar
area Vocational-Technical School will be under construction ar ound the
first of the year.
Atlanta ' s skyline is changing at a rapid rat e with the rise of new
skyscrapers. The latest on the drawing board is The First National
Bank which will be the tallest building in t he southeast. Measured
by pupil population, At lanta was the 16th largest school system in
the nation in 1963-64. Atlanta has 150 schools and over 7,000 children will enter kindergarten this year, Almost 110,000 school children
from kindergarten t4rough the twelfth grade will be enrolled in the
Atlanta School System in September. It takes approximately 40 million
dollars annually to operate the school system.
Re-printed from Atlanta Public Schools in F0CUS
(August
1964)
�11: 07 a.m.
R · ynolds & Lewis
M yor tom et
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S
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rrive
t Airport, D~l
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Mr. Arthur Montg
l.l : 0
ry
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v City Hall by b •
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llen
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�Nov . 11 , 1964
Te office of t h e Mayor of Atlan t a, Ga .
Mr . I van Allen ( I believ e)
Honorable Sir:
Several weeks a go I read a statement made by y ou or someone
in your offi ce.
I h a "i to read it t wice to believe i t, hm-t-
ever it went something l ike this:"One hundred years ago
t he city of Atl qnta , Ga . was level ed to t h e ground.
Today,
W§ 've built an $18,000,000.00 stadium on SOUTHERN SOIL wi th
SOUTHERN LABOR and with SOUTHERN MONEY. 11
I want · to know WHY
you don 't man it with a SOUTHERNBASEBALL
TEAM ?
With a ll tha t SOUTHERN Gab, I fe el sorry for the Milwau . ee
Braves.
I hope they d on ' t bring any NORTHERN money wi t h them .
Would it be negotiable?
I am not a n young punk" neither am I a n "old crank 11 and I
don 't
usually get p rovoked enough to write "opinion" letters
but t hat sil ly-., chil~ish remark coming from the off ices of the
Ci t y Fathers was too much- so I wish you SOUTHERJ.'J LUCK.
an X s outherner .
Mrs Norma Parl ier
2508 W. Carroll ~ve .
OAK CREEK, Wisc o
(Milwaukee suburb ) 53154
�- I
,
�November 9 , 1964
Mr. George F . Scarborou gh
3953 Green Oak Dri ve
Dora ville, Georgia
Dear Mr . Scarborough:
I certainly ppreciate your sending me a copy
of your letter to the Milwalkee County officials .
along with your nice note of November 9th.
I am delighted you share my enthusiasm. and I
hope we will have
signed con.tract for the people
of Atl nta nd Georgi within a very short time .
Sincerely,,
Iv n Allen, Jr .
M yor
IAJr: d
�3953 - yll.een. Oak. D1U...ve
Do;w,ville, yeo;u;_;,i..-a
Novembell. 9, 196ft.
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�THE FI R ST NATI O NAL BANK OF AT L ANTA
POST OF" F'I C E BOX 4148
ATLANTA 2 , GEORG I A
November 10, 1964
ARTHUR ANDERSON HUBER
ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor
City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
You have probably received many copies of the
enclosed article in Business Week. On the outside chance
that you did not, I thought you might be interested in
having a look at it.
We are all rooting for you. The news in the
paper yesterday morning was disheartening to all of us ,
yet I cannot help but feel that Milwaukee will realize
it has killed all chances for a profitable season next
year in that city, permitting the Br aves to be here as
promised, in the spring.
I would like to play a part in your endeavors ,
but you and Arthur seem to have the bases pretty well
covered.
With best regar ds , I am
your s ,
AAH: j j
Enc l osur e
�MILWAUKEE BRAVES, INO.
MILWAUKEE OOUNTY STADIUM:
MILWAu:in>:E , WISCONSIN
LOUIS R.PERJNI
Framingham, Mass.
December 28, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr .
Mayor
City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mr. Mayor:
-I have received your most attractive
Christmas photographs of yourself and your staff
and also the pictures of the stadium under construction.
I appreciate very much your courtesy in
sending these to me.
With every good wish for you and your
family for the coming year, I am
c,c-e
y,
ouis R. Perini
LRP / cd
�LAW OFFICES
HURT, HILL , RICHARDSON AND SOSEBEE
WILLIAM-OLIVER BUILDING
CHARLES D . HURT
J A MES C, HILL
ROBERT R . RICHARDSON
HUGH D . SOSEBEE
ROBERT L. TODD
CHARLES D · HURT, JR.
ATLANTA , GEORGIA 30303
TELEPHONE
524~7946
Oc:to
r
21, 1 64
PERSONAL AND C NFIDENTI L
. Harold Sheats
Attorney at Law
Fulton F ol Buildin
Atlanta, G or la
. H nry L. Bowden
y at Law
Citlz ns & uth m atlonol Bo.nk Bid .
Attorn
Atlanta, G
r io
Id and H nry:
In II
nt co
I wlll
ca
In touch with you by
n. Ivan All n
thur
. Sidney
t
~nl'bftlroutih
on wh n I r turn from
ew Y
on riday .
�October 27, 1964
Mr. Walla.ce William Dreyfoos
Davison - Pax.on Campany
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Wally:
The present .from. Little Miss Davison is
prominently displayed on the wall of my
reception roam.
Not many thing nicer have happened than
your ingenious ad welcoming the Braves.
With appreciation for your continued uppor',
lam
Sincerely your ,
Ivan All n, Jx-.,
Mayor
lAJr/br
�THE SOUTHERN COMPANY
LENOX TOWERS
33QO PEACHTREE ROAD, N. E .
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
PLEASE REPLY TO :
P.O. BOX 18877
HARLLEE BRANCH,JR.
(ZONE 30326)
PRESIDENT
October 28, 1964
TELEGRAM
William C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milwaukee Braves, Inc.
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
15,000 emp}oyees of our system companies>
living in this dynamic southeastern region, were
pleased to learn of your intended move to Atlanta.
We hope the legal underbrush will be cleared away
without delay to permit a firm decision on your part.
This is big league territory in every respect, and
you are assured of a warm welcome.
Harllee Branch, J r.
Pr es i dent
The Souther n Company
cc:
Mayor Ivan Al len, Jr.
Mr. Op ie L. Shelton
HBjr: ebh.
Syst,.,m @ompanw,:
24/abama 'Fbwer Gompany • (}eorgia 'Fbw<Y" Gompany • (}ulf'Power Gompany • Mississippi'Fbwer Gompany
Sou.tl,.ern Electric (}eneratu,g Gompany • Sou.tl,.ern. Services, Inc.
-
L , . .. •
• •• • .
�Mayor :r.van Allen, Jr. and Arthur Montgomery, Chairman of the
Stadium Authority, invited me to visit Atlanta to look at the new municipal
stadium being built and to make a first-hand inspection of the growth and
expansion in this fine city and its supporting region.
The Stadiu...,n Authority has given me a firm contract for consideration
of the Braves. I a:;:n taking this back to Chicago as part of the evaluation I
am making regarding the Braves' future.
The Braves :-ecognize the responsibility and public trust involved in
even considering the moving of a professional sports franchise from one area
to another e However, since ba_s eball is truly a national sport, we can no longer
ignore the vast areas of this country which do not currently enjoy our great
game.
I want to compliment the people of Atlanta, Mayor Allen, Arthur
Mont gomery, the Stadium Authority and the other elected officials for their
fores ight in c r eating the facilities and atmosphere for the inevitable
introducti on of major league sports to the southeastern ar ea of the United.
S t ates.
STATEMENT BY WILLIAM C . BAR THOLOMA Y
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRAVES
-October 14, 1964
�Mayor Ivan Allen, Jro and Arthur Montgomery, Chairman of the
Stadium Authority, invited m.e to visit Atlanta to look at the new municipal
stadium being built and to make a first-hand inspection of the growth and
expansion in this fine city and its supporting region.
The Stadiu-:n Authority has given me a firm contract for consideration
of the Braves.
I am taking this back to Chicago as part of the evaluation I
am making regarding the Braves I future.
The Braves :-ecogni ze the responsibility and public trust involved in
even cons idering the moving of a professional sports franchise from one area
to another e However , since baseball is truly a national sport, we can no longer
ignore the vast areas of this country which do not currently enjoy our g reat
gam e .
I wa nt to compliment the people of Atlanta, Mayor Alle n, A r t hur
. M ontg omery , th e Stadi um Authority and the othe r electe d offi cials fo r their
foresight in creating t h e fa ciliti es and a tmo s pher e fo r t h e inevit a ble
introduction of m a j or leagu e sports to t h e south e a s te rn area of t he United
S tates.
STA TEM E N T BY WILLIAM C . BART HOL OMAY
C HAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
MILWAUKEE BRA VES
October 14, 1964
�Octob.er 16. 1964
Mr. Sid Sc rborough
City of Atlanta .. Fulton County
Recreational Authority
5th Floor • 70 F irlie Street. N . W.
Atlant • Georg·
Dear Sid:
1 am
in alo
letter hich I
re.comm.ending Scotty S nford .
ration y
Sincer l: your ,
All u..
yor
lA:sr/ r
CC:
E ncl
Mrs. Matie Kendrick
Ul'e
Jr.,
recei
�DRAFT A RESOLUTION
By: Alderman Buddy (/, Fowlkes
Whereas, the Board of Aldermen created the City of Atlanta-
~~ ~ .
(j'J
Fulton County'-Stadit.tHl. Authority to hous w
rofessional baseball team, and
Whereas, this stadium will be completed in the Spring of 1965; and
Whereas, a firm contract has been presented to the Milwalke Braves
to move to Atlanta and capture the great southeastern sport<{ans; and
-r ,/
Whereas, th~ City will enthusiastically support the team to the
fullest ext en-{
We, therefore, the undersigned encourage the owners of the
Milwalkee Braves to accept the
offer to move to Atlanta, and we
pledge our spport in making your new home base prosperous , pleasant
and happy .
W e f urth e r resol v e that
a copy of this
do ~ , with the s e a!
of the c i ty clerk be forward e d to Mr . William C . Bartholomay , Chair man
of the Boa r d of the Milkwalkee Brav es.
�Octobe r 28, 1964
Mr. C. C. Williams
2980 Delmar Lane , N . W .
Apartment E.2.
Atlanta, Georgia
30311
Dear Mr. Williams:
As Mr·. Allen is out of the city, I would like -to
acknowledge receipt of your letter of October
27th.
We appreciate your interest in telling Mr. Aaron
and Mr. Maye about Atl nta. Thi is to advi e
that all ne-ces ry information which you mentioned
has already been furni hed to the owner of the
Milwaukee Braves by Mr . Allen.
Sincerely your ,
Ann Dzummond,
E1tecutive Se,c.re
AD/br
ry
�2980 Delmar Lane, N. w.
Rpartment E-2
Atlanta, Georgia 30311
October 27, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of the City of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia
My dear Mr. Mayor:
Congratulations to you on the concerted efforts you have put forth
in securing a Maj or League Baseball Team for Atlanta.
Knowing that you have received numerous congratulatory expressions
on this subject, it is my desire to extend warm, personal feelings because of certain factors involved.
As a classmate and personal friend of Mr. Henry Aaron, I talked
with him in person via telephone on October 23, 1964. During our conversation, he asked for a personal opinion concerning the r acial issues
in Atlanta. Having weighed the issues carefully , I informed Mr. Aaron
that I would collect a city survey from proper authorities.
In the meantime , I asked him to talk with Mr. Maye and at a convenient time, arranged by them, I would bring the results of the poll
ta.ken to Wisconsin.
This type of survey, I felt would give an opportunity to discuss
each phase of the city from many angl es as well as from several individual
points of view. Mr. Aaron, I am pleased to say, readily accepted m:y proposal.
In regards to the information concerning the survey, I would like to
discuss the matter with you personally i f such a conference can be arranged.
I would also like to secure materials, brochures, and other available
information pertinent to the matter of race relations in Atlanta.
I will be very grateful to l-tOU if you will give this matter your
serious consideration at a very early date so that I may be able to talk
with Mr. Maye and Mr . Aaron.
�The Honorable Ivan Allen - Page 2
There is also a possibility of Mrs. Aaron becoming interested in residing
in Atlanta.
Positive reactions from you, as well as favorable comments from other
prominent citizens, I feel, certainly will be important factors in determing
the future home of a family; especially when that family is connected with a
team that will be an asset to our city.
I hope to hear from y ou soon.
Very truly yours,
c. C. Williams
�October 2 6, 1964
Mr. Joe B . Bute.bison
61? Fulton National Bank Building
Atlanta 3, Georgia
De r Joe:
I certainly appreciate your taking the time to· end
me the article f~arn the Dallas Times Herald abaut
the .e xciting sports news in Atlanta.
We are eagerly antic:ipati.1'g die Bra
Atlan:ta.
c:oming to
Sincerely yours,
Ivan Allen. 3r.
lAJr/br
�JOE
B.
H UTCHISON
012 FULTON NATIONAL BANK BUILDING
ATLANTA 3 , GEORGIA
October 23, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor, City of Atlanta
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I thought you would be very interested in th
attached article from the Dallas Times-Her d.
It is wonderful publicity for Atlanta,
a I
t hink it is a fine compliment to you and the
job you are doing.
Si ncere ly ,
B. Hutchison
j s
Enclosure
�Spon:,"brt!d b\ the Sports Dpartment of
11 O
Atlanta I 4,
Leathers Circle, Northwest
Geqrgi,;
October 19, 1964
AL . THOMPSO N
President
MARION E. JACKSON. SR
Coo r<linntor
THELBA M. BROWN
Secr e tary
JOSEPH JACOBS
Financial Secr etary
T. J . CRITTENDEN
Trea~urcr
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of Atlanta
Atlanta , Georgia
J. R. SIMMONS
Stat iALicirw
Ey dear Eayor Allen :
JOEL W . SMITH
llUtoriographer
A\\10.rd, And Rating l 'ornmi tl<'C'
RALPH C. ROBINSON,
Chairman
JOEL W. SMITH
MARION E. JACKSON . SR.
WILLIAM M. NIX
The attached copy of our telegra:n to Mr . Bartholomay
is being sent for your infor'Tlation and files . In a
meetine yesterday, we also asked our rembers t.o send
individual teleBran,s.
With best. wishes .
Sincerely yours ,
lnnual Au:arda Danqul't Committ,•r
J. R. SIMMONS
Chairman
WILLIAM A. SCOTT . Ill
A . T. HOLLINGSWORTH
EMEL J. SCOTT
BLANCHARD M . COO KE
A. L. Thompson
President
JJrogram And A.ctiC"itic, Cummittc~
JAMES
H.
WILLIAMS,
~nclosure
(,/ioirmnu
JACK ADAM5
DR. HARVEY 8 . SMITH
Du.rf.r::,t•t Anti .Ucm.bcr ,hip (;ommitt£'r
DR. CHARLES F . GOOSBY.
Chairman
T.
J. CRITTENDEN
DR. ROBERT H. JORDAN
Re :r·arch Committt·r.
DR. WILLIAM B
SHROPSHIRE.
£.1wirmur,
JOSEPH JACOBS
HORACE A. BOHANNON
Public Relation Nepresent.1t.i1 •'
The Mos·; H. Ken.frv. 01ga11b1tzon,
IJ'a~hington. V. C.
�T E L E GR AM
October
16, 1964
MR. WTILIAM C. BARTHOLOYJAY
CHAIRYJAN OF BOARD - MILWAUKEE BRAVES
2 NORTH RIVERSIDE PLAZA
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
THE 100% 'WRONG CLUB. A1~ ATLANTA SPORTS GOOUP OF NATIONAL RSPUTATION
A~ID I NFLUENCE, JOINS THOUSAJ~ DS OF RAGER BASEBALL FANS TO ASSURE THE
BRAVES OF DEDICATED SUPPORT I N TI-ITS SOUTHEASTERN AREA ,
WHEN 'IBI S FINE
BALL CLUB COMES TO OCCUPY ATLANTA I S MULTI- MILLION DOLLAR STADIIB1 .
WE LOOK FORWARD WITH GRF'...AT ENTHUSIASM TO EN,JOYING THE RENE::CITS OF THI S
MUTUALLY ADVANTAGEOUS ASSOCIATION OF A GREAT CITY AND A GREAT ORGANIZATI ON.
A. L. THOMPSON
PRlmIDENT
l OO i '\:J!lONG CLUB
11 0 Leathers Circle, N. W.
A tJ.an ta
, Ga .
SY. h- l '.l74
,.
�DIRECTORS
OFFICERS
ARTH UR BURDETT. JR.
FRANK CART ER
MCIVER EVANS
EMERSON HOLLEM AN
CONE M . MADDOX. J R.
H ARR Y NORMAN. J R.
WM. S . SIMMS
J AM ES L. S T A RNES
A . H . STURGESS
SAMUEL M. WEYMAN
STEWART W IGHT
WARD WIG HT. JR.
THOMAS V . CA UBLE. PRESIDENT
J . MARION CRAIN . VICE P RESIDENT
C . D . LEBEY. JR .. VICE PRESIDENT
JACK D . M . MORSE. VICE PRESIDENT
HENRY C . BALDWIN. TREASURER
NOEL C . T URNER. SECRETARY
MRS. T OMMIE JACKS ON. E XECUTIVE SECRETARY
HEALEY
BUILDING
Cctob r 19, 1964
N I GHT LETTER
Mr . V:m . C. B rtholomay, Ch&it'rnan o f t he Board
Milwaukee Brave , Inc .
2 N. Riverside Plaza
Chicago, ILLu~ IS
RF.PRES · NTING THE O FIC .. RS O
( .ABD VE URGENTLY REOUF.ST T
BRAVES 1 0 A 'l
0
0
NTA AND TO CUR
T
ATLANTA .. ,LAL EST TE
ING THE MIL ,.AU?
. STADIUM. AT A REC :NT
ORGIA RFALTOPS ASSOCIATION MEETING lN ATLANTA A NUM
C LUM US GFO'.RGIA REALTOR
SS 'D THIS
A
.. R.
E INTER ST .
Henry C. Baldwin, Chahman
Civic > ffai:re Committee
Atlanta Real
etate Board
�October 19, 1964
Mr. Willi m C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milw ukee Braves, Inc.
2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
Dear Mr.
artholomay:
For the good of Atl nt, as well s for the
_ood of th Brave I I most ince:r ly and heartily
r is my voice in the c:reseending chorus which t.rill
reach you inviting them to make th ir hon:ae here.
Wh
that h ppy d y rrive I all e citiz
of Atlanta can w r Dartmouth coll g ties ! Th~ rru>ol
for th
chool,
you
y know, i an Indi n H d.
-...
c. ., .
Pi-
1d
1m
t
CrP:r
bee:
bee :
Mr. Op i e: L. Shelton
Honorable I van Allen, Jr., Mayor
/
�A RESOLUTION
BY DOUGLAS L .
OWLKES
WHEREAS, the Mayor and Board of Aldermen of the City
of Atlanta were instrumental in the creation of the City of
Atl anta - Fulton County Recreational Authority to construct and
manage
stadium in the City of Atlanta
bo
house
profession 1
baseball t eam, and
WHEREAS , this stadi um will b . completed in the
Spring of 1965; and
WHEREAS ,
firm contract h s been presented t o the
management of t he Mil waukee Braves t o move to Atlant a and occupy
this modern stadium and t o c pture t he sports f ans of th
s outh-
eastern area , and
WHEREAS , t he r sidents and offici l s of the City of
Atlant a will enthusi atic lly
upport this team t o the f ullest
extent ;
NOW, THEREFORE , BE l T RESOLVED by th
of Al d rmen of the City of At l nt
of the Mil w uk
Brav s to
nd to occupy our great new
kin
tb1
n
Be
of Al
by
ho
it furth r r
tadtum nd w pl dg
t o Atlant
our support i n
sant and h ppy .
olv d th teach
ndorse
the owner
thi
r
emb r of th
olutto and so
o rd
i nifte•
his si nature b reto .
e it furth r r
el o
th l
ncour
cc pt t his offer to mov
prosp r ous, pl
rmen individually
ffixin
th t they
yor and Bo rd
y, C ai
1
that
the C ty Clerk
l!'
orw r
y of this r solutio
t
Willi
f th Milw k
c.
•
�I ii|ii
i%
i' 'J
1='
av'.'
viwfhJ
>}l
"i
iH 'M
¥;pA«'W"'r.VV, ,
Jrif
'
I
' i\ 'Mij Ujj5>l,
t»,!
�BY DOUGLAS L ..
WLKES
s,
WK
of Atl nta
Atl nt
th
Mayor and Bo rd of Ald rmen of the City
nt l in th er
ere int:
- P\J.lton County Recr
nage
Sprin
tl nt
to hous
th
City of
nd
to con1ttTUct
prof
icmal
nd
•
WHEREAS, thi
of 1965,
t dium
co l t d in th
111
d
fi
c ntr ct hae b :n pr s nt
nd to captur
mo ra
tbla
tlon 1 Authorit
t«dium in th City of
11 t
tion o
th . ports
to th
n of the
outb-
ust ra are,
,o fficf.Al
Atl
tit
will
thu.slasti
t
City of
to the full
t;
~t
, B
I
f Alde
of
lly eupport thl
of th
OLVBD by t
City of Atl&nt• th t tb y
ra ••to• c
•
•
t thl•
•ta 1
t
1,
k
IT
roue,
a
la
ff
f Al
i•.
•
rs
Atla
i
w
t •
. rd
t •
•
al
•
•
b
1
l
t'
D
th
r
1• r • lu i
,.
our
t •
lt
af
Mayor
f
ia
1 t1
11
•
1••
��-
·- A
··
OLUTlO
BY t>OOGLAS L. FOWLKES
WHEREAS, tb
of Atlan
Atlant
r
- Fulton County
tadi
b aeball t
tion 1 Authority t
in th City of Atl nt
construct .aa
to bou
a prof
l
int
ional
n
•
thi
WH
t dium
ill
e
Sprin of 1965, ao~
WHEllEAS. a firm contr ct h
t of th
thi mod m atadi
aat rn ar
'
Mil• uk
a1'd to
n pr: ant
B v . a to mov to Atl
pture the port
ta an occupy
of th south·
f
n
co th fullest
tl nt will enthual stic 11 support tbia t
xt
to th
t;
OLVBD y tb
•
r
rd
own r
of the
t
t
cc t thl
t new at di
•
ha
1
a.6 A1
•
Atl nee
7•
thet" re, lva ta eac
fa
a
t
i i
�A
OLUnON
BY DOUGLAS L. FOWLKES
yor nd oard of Ald rmen of the City
'WHEREAS, th
er ation of th City of
of Atl nta wer iii tru:
Atl nt
- Fulton County R er
ge
b
e
tionl Authority to con truct
City of Atl nta to house
tadium in th
prof
nd
ion l
, and
11 te
WHEREAS, thi
tadium ill be completed in th
Spring of 1965, and
WHEREAS,
firm contr ct h
nag ment of th Milwaukee Brav
thi
modem a
t
dium nd to c ptur
b n present
to mov
the
to
to th
tlant4 and occupy
ports f na of th
south-
rn r
Atl nta
residents and offici 1 of th
s, th
WH
nthu i stic lly
11
upport this tam to th
City of
full
t
extent;
w,
of Alde
oard
n of th City of Atlanta that thy encoura e the own r
of th Milw u
to
n too cup our r
ki
SOLVED by the Mayor nd
, BE IT
thi n
n
t
and w pl d • our •upport i
le ant an
urth r -reeolv c1 that ach
ol Al
lly.
bi
•
reaolN
i
r o th• or
t 1• r .aoluti
t .
Cl
l of the
•
or•
•
~
•
st i
• b r to.
t
it furt •
•
to Atl · ta
t this off r to
bo
• it
7 etfixi
c
f
t
0
of
7
f thia
111
•
lu i
c.
·"··
1••
��WASHINGTON OFFICE
AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION
Direclor
Donald E. Channell
Assistant Director
1120 Connecticut Avenue, N. W . , Washington, D.C . 20036 Tel. (202) 337-8266
Lowe I I R. Beck
Assislonl lo the Director
H. Michael Spence
October 29, 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor
City of Atlanta
Georgia
Dear Ivan:
I regret that I did not have an opportunity to see you while
in Atlanta. I did s ee a great deal of you in the newspapers
and on Television regarding the Braves.
I was greatly impressed with the progres s that has b een
made in y our wond e rful city and I hope to r e turn soon and get
togeth er with you.
Sincerely,
�30 Cambridge Road
Madison 4, Wis.
October 25, 1964
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
City Hall
Atlant a, Ga.
Dear Sir:
As more and more facts come into print relating the surreptitious dealings
between you and the present owners of the Milwaukee baseball franchise, I
become i ncreasingly impressed by the complet e disregard shown by both parties
for t he people a nd city of Milwaukee.
You, as mayor of Atlanta and principle
negotiator with the "fast Buck" owners of the franchis e, sought to i gnore an
exi sti ng contract between those owners and the county of Milwaukee as well as
the f ine support given the clup by Milwaukee fans .
I am sure you would not
want others to deal i rresponsibly in a f fairs relating to y our c ity, were the
situation reversed .
Certainly a mayor should act in an ethical manner not
only in his city, but beyond his ci t y and state.
Ati anta ' s desire for major
league baseball is no excuse to do otherwise .
A more honorable course would have been t o work for league expansion through
the league office.
In my opinion by failing to do thi s your a ctions have been
detrimental to both baseball and Milwaukeeo
I believe you owe both an apology.
B~,lkSydney Miller, M.Do
r
�r
--,
9700 W. Grantosa Drive
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53222
October 26, 1964
Ivan Allen, Jr. , "Mayor"
11 City of Atlanta"
Atlanta, Georgia
Seems to us we have been reading in the press these days
about a shift of a major league franchise better known as the
"Braves" to a "city" called Atlanta. Somewhere in our geography
lessons we learned that this was a city down in a state called
Georgia, the land of peaches and peanuts.
Well, at any rate, we've been reading a few quotes of yours
in our papers here, and to say that we have been amused beyond
description is putting it mildly. To refresh your memory, here are
a few.
"Today we welcome the opportunity to become a symbol of
southern zest and drive, a major league city, a major league
state, and a major league region." Man, this Atlanta must be
qui te a place! After all the shenanigans which have gone on between Atlanta and these young owners of the Braves and the methods
used to effect the transfer of the franchise to Atlanta, about the
best we can say is that the whole business is strictly bush-league.
As for the above quote, up here in Milwaukee we call it BALONEY!
And quite a mouthful at thatl Careful now, don't choke.
Another quote. "I don't think anything has been handled more
properly and more above board. It is recognized that when a city
loses attraction for the club, it moves out." Come now, Ivan , you
don't really believe that do you? You couldn't! Don't you know that
from 1903 to 1953 there wer e no shifts in fr anchises until the big
money boy from Boston moved his club to Milwaukee in '53? And really,
there is no comparison with that move to the present luring of the
Braves to Atlanta.
·
During these years the minor leagues flourished to a reasonable
degree, but once fellows like Stoneham, whose attendance in San
Francisco this past season was nothing to shout about, and O'Malley
whose Dodgers collapsed this year, and Charlie Finley, whose A's
found it easy to land in the cellar, when these fellows decided to
head out in other directions, then came the gradual decline of the
minor leagues. If that last statement of the above quote is true,
then baseball can start screaming, "Look out below!" It's on the
way down and out now.
Another quote . In congratulating Atlantans for their courage
in building an 18 million dollar stadium you have been quoted as
saying, "They represent the new, dynamic south which is no longer
willing to be side-lined on the back benches." Wow, are those
vote-getting words. You ought to be a sure-fire winner in the next
election with statements like that. Yes, sir, Ivan, I'll bet they
really love you down Atlanta way these days.
�To continue. "Our stadium is a southern project, built on
southern soil (No kidding), with southern money, by southern
occupants and contractors. We feel it is uniquely fitting that this
decision has been made which marks almost exactly the centennial
of the day when Atlanta was left an ask-strewn ruin, symbol of a
region 1.s defeat." Isn't that tender! It almost drives one to tears.
How does it happen that Lou Perini isn't building your new
ballyard? Of course, he needs the money like a moose needs a hat-rack,
but after all, isn't Louis one of the owners of your new club? But
that wouldn't look good, would it? There are a few things we have to
keep on the level, aren't there?
And those words about "the centennial of the day when Atlanta
was left an ash-strewn ruin, symbol of a mm:Ib:mmm region's defeat."
Those words could prove to be providential. You could get the same
shoddy treatment from these young owners that we received, and after
they have "bled" you for all they can, they're just apt to dicker
under the table a year in advance with some other unsuspecting city.
Then you too will have a defunct ball pasture like we'll have. We're
planning on bringing back donkey baseball. What'll you havei
Back in 19)9 when John Quinn, now General Manager for the
Phillies, saw the light and left the Braves, the Braves brought in
a guy by the name of John McHale as Ueneral Manager. At that time a
respected and influential citizen of Detroit supposedly said, "The
greatest day in Detroit baseball dawned when McHale left Detroit and
went to Milwaukee." Well, fr om that day on the fortunes of the Braves
were never in sorrier hands. Now Johnny boy is leaving Milwaukee.
Hallelujah! And with him will go a couple of little boys from our
ne ighbor ing s tate to the south. Good riddance! I n our l ast will and
tes tament we bequeath them to you, with the hope that you won't be
11 takenr• l ike we were. So be careful and insist on a contract fo r
at
lea st thir teen years so that you can at least pay for your new
stadium.
We under stand you also made a pitch for the St. Louis Cardinal s
of t he Nati onal Football League , but weren't successful. Must be t he
Bidwell boy s II smelled a r at and wi s ely snubbed you. We understand you
had a tremendous crowd for an exhi biti on game the ~ardinals played
t here , and a wor se crowd when two t eams of the Amer ican Football
League played a game there . Where were all thos e Atlantans who, as
you supposedl y said "represent the dynami c s out h?"
And finally , don 't for get that chubby little rascal Warren Giles,
the so-called President of t he National League. What a boy! With
all the hot air he t hrows aroundm he reminds us of a cent ral heating
plant . In him , Ford Frick , and Joe Cronin baseball has the highest
type of poor leadership. When bas eball es t ablishes its "Hall of IllFame", we can tell you who will head the list.
With everlasting sympath~ to the players on the club, we remain
Very sincerely yours,
Former Braves Fans
�DEMET ta DEMET
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS
324 EAST WISCONSIN AVENUE
MILWAUKEE 2, WISCONSIN
FRANCIS J. DEMET
BROADWAY 3-7390
MAIi.CADETTE M.DEMET
October 28, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor of Atlanta
,City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Re:
Milwaukee Braves, Inc., a Delaware Corporation
Sir:
You are hereby placed o n n otice t ~hat the undersigned,
as a minority stockholder, has commenced an action in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wis consin in Case No. 64 -C-305, praying f or a permanent injunction
restraining the Mi lwaukee Braves from moving to Atlanta , Georgia,
in violation o f its enforc eable contract with Milwauke e County.
You are further put on notice and, advised that the
enforceable contract referred to ab ove is b inding between the
Milwaukee Braves and Milwaukee County until December 31, 1965.
The contract provides for the ren tal by the Milwaukee raves
from Milwaukee_County of Milwaukee County Stadium for purposes
of playing national l eague baseba ll home games by the Milwaukee
Braves for the 1965 season.
You are hereby placed o n notice that any further efforts,
on your part or on the part o f your various governmental units
and others acting in concert with you to breach and aid in the
breach of the contract referred to above , will expose you and each
of y~u to the consideration of further stockholder legal action.
FJD:alv
cc:
cc:
Milwaukee Journal
Milwaukee Sentinel
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�COME TO WHERE THE SIX EYES MEET •.• SO THAT WE MAY
SAY THE BRAVES WON'S' SUFFER DEFEAT.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
BRAVE THE WAY AND COME TODAY . THE PEOPLE ARE WANTING
SEASONAL TICKETS ••• AND THE CONTRACTOR SAYS THERE WILL
BE A GREAT DAY NEXT MAY .
. . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
COME THIS WAY BRAVES AND SAVE THE DAY •••• THE MAYOR AND
THE BLDERMEN ARE RUNNING AND THE CONTRACTOR ' S MAKING
HAY •••• FOR THE DAY NEXT RAY .
�C TY
OF ATLANTA
OFFICE OF
MUNIC IPA L REV ENUE COLLECTOR
E X-OFFICIO MARSHAL AND TREASURER
Atlanta 3, Georgia
October 15, 1964
CHARLES L . MATH E W S
MUN ICIPAL REVENU E CO LLE C TOR
Gentlemen::
Atlanta i s t he greatest sports city in the entire
Southeast and a Major League baseball team would be
another great asset to this wonderful city.
I am quite sure that the people of Atlanta will
support a team like the Milwaukee Braves, and I will
personally give them all the support I possibly can.
MEMBER MUNICIPAL FINANCE OFFICERS ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STA TES AN D CANADA
�L '2A: (Q U
E
C . G.~L l US
M~
. l ...
~ I\ {l\.a.. S
�Telegram to the BRAVES
The Braves' fans will have a new freeway system of six (6)
Interstate Highways plus a new major thoroughfare system to
bring them to see all home games in the new Atlanta Stadium.
We welcome you to Atlantao
Karl A. Bevins
City Traffic Engineer
�October 16 , 1964
'Tele gram
According to news reports, there is a possibility that the
Braves mi ght move to Atlanta. This is wonderful news as a
dynamic team such as the Braves could not find a cit y as
dynamic and sports-minded as Atlanta. I hereby make a strong
p ersonal pl ea ur ging the Braves move to Atlanta.
Paul B. Ivey
~ 8-1:-:
@:U3-e-v-a-Pe
Urive
At)"an '(., a. -Ge-er-g4 a
I «"f d
C / 7?/
/j
of
~ y1 r/
~
•E •
3 0 3-l 7
·-
,17h-v~.
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT OF CITY HALL
ATLANTA
3,
G EORGIA
October 15, 1964
J. HOWARD MONROE
Superintendent
Telegram to:
Milwaukee Braves
Milwaukee, Wis.
Come on Braves.
Come to Atlanta where
progress is a habit and our people wait
with open arms.
~~n~
City Hall Superintendent
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�CITY OF ATLANTA
PERSO NN E L B O A RD
C ITY HA LL
Atlanta, Georg ia
30303
CAR L T . SUTHERLAND
Di r e ctor
Not only Atlanta baseball fans but also
those from throughout the entire Southeast are anx ious
to have a major league baseball team in our own section
that we can support.
We trust that the Milwaukee Braves
will be that team .
CARL T . SUTHERLAND
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�Iy
opi nion is
hat no city in the country would support
the Braves like Atlanta.
Come on down, we nee d
Ernest J. Brewer
Purchasi ng Ag nt
City of At l ant a
ou.
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT of CONSTRUCTION
301 CITY HALL
Atlanta 3, Georgia
October 16, 1964
RAY A. NI X ON
Chief of Construction
M . B. NIXON
Asst. Chief of Construction
Mr. William C. Bartholomay
Chairman of the Board
Milwaukee Braves
~2 North Riverside Plaza
Chicago, Illinois
Dear Mr. Bartholomay:
Bring the Braves down to Atlanta next year and lets
make it three series in a row for the National League .
Sincerely,
RAN:ck
ATLANTA
THE
DOGWOOD
CITY
�Mr. Landers;
The following members of the Board of Aldermen when contacted by us
requested that we compose an appropriate telegram for their signature:
/ . . Gregory Griggs
JJ.
M. Flanigen
/4harlie Leftwich
~ ohn A.
White
Ben Moore
Jack Summers
~~c2c1~
/:~~
~;,u_:/!~
QJJ~
clcJ / j ~
�DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICITY
DEWEY
L.
JOHNSON
SUPERINTENDENT ELECTRICAL AFFAIRS
October
16, 1964
Mr. Wil li am C. Bartholomay
Board Cha i rman Mi hraukee Braves
Nationa l League
We of the Electrical Div is i on of the City of
Atlanta and a l l of the e l ectr i cal workers of
this area are very anxious for y ou to br ing
y our Brave s of the Nat i onal League to our
city. We offer our full cooperation and believe
that you wi ll be successful here.
Yours very truly ,
ELECTRIC A.L DIVISION
E. F. Wise ,
Chief Electrical Inspector
ATLANTA
T~E
DOGWOO D
CITY
�a great
inc mmunity 7rov
sports sta ·
'f'·
the
2,400,000 potential major
,J}I
league baseball fans)within two hours driving time of our new stadium,
anxiously await the announcement of the Bravesi move to Atlanta - the
Capitol of the Southeast.
~
in ou
Wyont B. Bean
Planning Engineer
City of Atlanta
�CITY OF ATLANTA
DEPARTMENT
OF
BUILDINGS
PLUMBING DIVISION
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303
JAMES H. SCHOFIELD, SR., P.E . , A.S.S.E.
WILLIA M R. WOFFORD, P . E., R . A.
CH IEF PLUMB I NG I NSP E C T OR
I NS P EC T OR OF B U IL D I N GS
EL MER H. MOON , E . E., P.E.
WY L IE W. MITCHELL , A.S. S.E.
A S S T. I NS PECT OR OF B UILDI N G S
ASS T. CH IEF P L UMB I N G IN SPEC T O R
October 16 , 1964
Honorable Ivan Allen , Jr .
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
We have twelve employees in the Plumbing Division, and
we are unanimously in accord with your wishes for Major
League Baseball in the City of Atlanta .
We sincerely believe that you are capable of securing
this franchise from Milwaukee, as well as a Professional
Football Team in the very near future .
Many wishes for the continued success of your administration.
Yours very truly,
!Ill//~
W.W. Mitchell, Assistant
Chief Plumbing Inspector
WWM/gs
AT L ANT A
Tl-I E DOGWO O D C I TY
��A RESOLUTION
BY DOUGLAS L . FOWLKES
l·fflEREAS, the Mayot: and Board of Aldermen of the City
of Atl nta were in trument 1 in the er ation of the City of
Atl nta - Fulton County Recreation 1 Authority to con truct and
nage
stadium in th
City of Atlanta to house
prof
ion 1
bas ball te m, and
WHEREAS, thi
s adium will be completed in the
Spring of 1965, and
firm contri ct b s b en pr sent
WHEREAS,
management of the Milwauk
thi
Br ves to mov
modern st dium nd to captur
t m
th
· to the
to Atlanta
nd occupy
f ns of th
port
south-
rea, and
r
WHEREAS, th
Atlanta will enthu 1
identa and offici 1
tit lly support thi
t
of the City of
m to th
full
t
xtent;
, BE IT RESOLVED by the
l«>W, THEREJ'O
n of th
of Ald
of th
Mil
u
City of Atl nt
Br v
to ace
thie n who
.o f Alde
ividually en or
his ai
ture
t
l
t
y,
f
th
own r
to Atlanta
off r to
h
that
pl dg
our support in
o r
f t
a
ao
nifi •
r to.
t
Ci 1 Cl
0
ch met111>er
a thi• r soluti
r
it f rth
Uft<1U
thi
oard
, ro p r u , pl . s nt and h p y.
it furthei- ,:e olv
ya fixi
th t they
st dium and
nd to occupy
kin
t
yor and
0
r
ft
c py oft is r eoluti
e
t
illt
c.
•
��SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
HURT BUILDING
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
30303
WM. C. BURNETT
GENERAL ENGINEERING TRAINING SUPERVISOR
AREA CODE 404 529-8487
November 13, 1964
The Honorable Ivan Allen, Jr.
Mayor's Off ice
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
Dear Mayor Allen:
I last wrote you on April 2, urging prompt construction of the stadium. I want to let you know that I
strongly support your continued constructive approach
toward making the best of the unexpected situation regarding
our Major League Baseball Team.
I am convinced that you
acted in full good faith, and that the Braves' officials
did likewise. It is unfortunate that legal action was
instituted. I believe that this was truly unforeseen.
I am pleased that you want to go to Milwaukee
to talk to the County officials and to try to work out
some arrangement that will give us some Major League ball
in Atlanta in 1965. If that fails, and I feel rather
confident that you will be successful , then I will support
a Milwaukee farm team next summer.
I again wish to express my deep appreciation for
all that you have done for Atlanta.
I am writing a similar
letter to Mr. Authur Montgomery who wrote to me last April
after I had written to you.
I urge that the stadium be named Atlanta Stadium .
Sincerely,
�
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